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Tuesday, December 13, 2011

REPORT: FEDERAL PREDATOR DRONES BEING USED ON U.S. CITIZENS IN AMERICA


REPORT: FEDERAL PREDATOR DRONES BEING USED ON U.S. CITIZENS IN AMERICA The aerial drones that have become a critical tool in Uncle Sam’s wars abroad are now in use for local law enforcement purposes, according to recent report, raising a host of legal and ethical questions as military and law enforcement functions increasingly blend together.

One case that has raised this issue to national attention is the drone-assisted capture of a rancher family suspected of rustling cattle in North Dakota this past summer.
According to a wire story on Stars and Stripes, in late June a sheriff went looking for six missing cows on the Brossart ranch, and three men brandishing rifles allegedly chased him off the property.
Fearing a standoff, the sheriff called in ”reinforcements from the state Highway Patrol, a regional SWAT team, a bomb squad, ambulances and deputy sheriffs from three other counties.”
On top of all that, the sheriff also called in an unarmed Predator B (MQ-9 Reaper) drone, which belonged to the border patrol. He said the men on the ranch were carrying rifles, so law enforcement stood down for the night.
The next morning, the predator circled 2 miles above and, with its highly advanced sensor system, ascertained that the ranchers were unarmed. Police then swooped in and made arrests.
This was the first time that the predator — an unmanned aerial vehicle that has become the global symbol of America’s “War on Terror” — has been used to assist local law enforcement apprehend a U.S. Citizen on U.S. soil.
But this predator drone incident is just the tip of the hellfire missile, so to speak.
Back in 2005, Predator drones were appropriated by Congress to assist Customs and Border Patrol to protect the U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico. There are at least eight active duty drones patrolling the skies over the U.S. Homeland, and since June 2011 they have been “loaned” to domestic law enforcement agencies in North Dakota over a dozen times, according to Stars and Stripes.
The FBI and DEA have also borrowed the CBP drones on numerous occasions, according to law enforcement officials, but no exact figures are available.
Here is a video clip showing a Predator drone in action over the U.S.- Mexico border:

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