Close Menu
Tactical AmericansTactical Americans
  • Home
  • Guns
  • Knives
  • Gear
  • News
  • Videos
  • Community

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tactical, firearms and many more news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's Hot

Shadow Systems CR920XP & CR920XL: Carry Gun Excellence [REVIEW]

Dec 19, 2025 9:58 am

US Patriot – Customized Army & Air Force OCP Uniforms

Dec 19, 2025 9:57 am

Paris, Tokyo cancel New Year’s Eve celebrations amid urgent safety concerns

Dec 19, 2025 9:45 am
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Friday, December 19, 2025 10:01 am EST
Trending
  • Shadow Systems CR920XP & CR920XL: Carry Gun Excellence [REVIEW]
  • US Patriot – Customized Army & Air Force OCP Uniforms
  • Paris, Tokyo cancel New Year’s Eve celebrations amid urgent safety concerns
  • Thousands gather as Bondi Beach reopens after attack on Hanukkah celebration
  • Thousands of Surfers and Swimmers at Bondi Beach Form Heart in Tribute to Victims of Mass Shooting at Hanukkah Event By Becca Longmire
  • I Carry: Smith & Wesson Model 10 Revolver in a Bianchi Holster
  • Pregnant Inmate Surprised with Baby Shower in Jail by Sheriff's Office Before Giving Birth to Son By Becca Longmire
  • US prisons battle evolving drones used to smuggle contraband to inmates
  • Privacy
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest VKontakte
Tactical AmericansTactical Americans
  • Home
  • Guns
  • Knives
  • Gear
  • News
  • Videos
  • Community
Newsletter
Tactical AmericansTactical Americans
Home » US prisons battle evolving drones used to smuggle contraband to inmates
News

US prisons battle evolving drones used to smuggle contraband to inmates

Jack BogartBy Jack BogartDec 19, 2025 7:43 am0 ViewsNo Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp
US prisons battle evolving drones used to smuggle contraband to inmates
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

COLUMBIA, S.C. – More drones are being detected flying over U.S. prisons than ever before, and federal regulations make it harder for state prisons to do anything about it.

Advancements in drone detection technology have shown a dramatic increase in airborne smuggling operations over U.S. prisons since 2018. The Federal Bureau of Prisons reported 479 drone incidents at federal prisons in 2024, a substantial rise from 23 incidents in 2018. Unlike the federal government, states cannot shoot down a drone or jam its radio frequencies. 

Joel Anderson, director of South Carolina’s Department of Corrections, said his team is leading the nation in developing drone detection systems. South Carolina reported 262 drone incursions over its prisons in 2022, up from 69 in 2019. 

“We get assaulted nightly,” Anderson said. “We get assaulted at multiple institutions at night.”

PRISON OFFICERS INTERCEPT DRONE DELIVERING STEAK, CRAB LEGS WITH SEASONING TO INMATES IN CONTRABAND DROP

Anderson has watched drone smuggling missions become more elaborate in recent years. When smugglers first went airborne, he said drones only carried about four pounds and reached a top speed of 45 miles per hour. Now, massive heavy-lift drones traveling more than 75 miles per hour are hauling 25-pound duffle bags of contraband over prison fences. 

“At some institutions, it’ll be nights just one right after another… They may have multiple drops in one night, just flying back and forth to the controller and back to the institution,” Anderson said. 

Most of the criminal drone pilots are former inmates who already have connections inside and know the layout of the facility. Many inmates contact them with illegal cellphones obtained in prison. 

Most of the time, Anderson said drone pilots will try to camouflage their payloads, making it harder to spot from a distance. 

“If they’re lying on the grass out there, say, on a green day during the summer months, a lot of times they’ll take duct tape and put grass on it and lay it across the yard,” Anderson said. “It’s not easy to see from here. You know, you have to be right on top of it to be able to see and detect it.”

UFO-LIKE ‘DRONES’ TARGET POLICE HELICOPTER OVER AIR BASE BEFORE VANISHING: REPORT

Camo Drone Contraband Payload

South Carolina has developed a drone detection system for all of its medium and maximum security prisons. When a drone is over a facility, select prison staff get a cellphone alert that a drone is in the area. Seconds later, a dedicated drone response team scrambles to the location of the drop.

Within minutes, the drone is out of sight unless it crashed or the prison’s drone team followed it back to the controller.

Drone Cellphone Alert

“We’ve had drones caught in our nets. We’ve had drones caught in our fences. We’ve had drones crash on the yard. We’ve had drones where the battery ran out,” Anderson said. 

The drone team confiscates disabled drones and pulls their in-flight records, which show investigators the drone’s previous flights, the paths it took and the images it created. 

Drones Confiscated by the South Carolina Department of Corrections

Anderson said flight data can lead law enforcement to a drone pilot’s front door for an easy arrest. 

“In some cases, our crooks are so smart that they’ll fly them in their own yards,” Anderson said. “We had one fly and took a picture of his mailbox, and that’s how we went and got him.”

Currently, detection and confiscation is all states can do when a drone flies over its prison. The Federal Aviation Administration prohibits states from bringing down drones because they are considered registered aircraft.

Anderson agreed that shooting down a drone could be dangerous for people inside and outside the prison because they often carry deadly drugs. 

“We picked up enough fentanyl, one institution to kill the entire prison system one time. Four hundred and sixty-four grams of fentanyl in one bag with one drone,” Anderson said. “We would hate to disable a drone, and it flies off into a subdivision somewhere, and then we don’t know where it is.”

Drone response team search for contraband drop

Anderson said drone smuggling wouldn’t be as big of an issue if inmates didn’t have access to the illegal cell phones they pay people thousands of dollars to smuggle in. 

The Federal Communications Commission is looking to allow states to use radio-jamming technology, which would prevent inmates from contacting people outside the prison walls.  

“I applaud our staff for being as steadfast as they are. They’re good at what they do,” Anderson said. “I’d much rather be using them in the living areas, watching inmates, than running around out here chasing illegal packages, because a lot of it is caused by these illegal cell phones that we have that give them direct communication with their counterparts outside the fences.”

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Paris, Tokyo cancel New Year’s Eve celebrations amid urgent safety concerns

Thousands gather as Bondi Beach reopens after attack on Hanukkah celebration

Thousands of Surfers and Swimmers at Bondi Beach Form Heart in Tribute to Victims of Mass Shooting at Hanukkah Event By Becca Longmire

Pregnant Inmate Surprised with Baby Shower in Jail by Sheriff's Office Before Giving Birth to Son By Becca Longmire

DHS Secretary Noem announces pause on Diversity Immigrant Visa Program lottery

Rob Reiner's Son Nick Could Be Ineligible for Inheritance Because of 'Slayer Statute': Legal Experts (Exclusive) By Alex Ross 369

Rob Reiner's Daughter Found Dad's Body After Massage Therapist Called Her, Didn't Know Mom Was Also Dead in House: Report  By Amy McCarthy 217

Nearly 30,000 Illegally Trafficked Animals Rescued In a Month-Long Global Extraction Mission By Moná Thomas

Police Allege Drunken Wrong-Way Driver Slammed into 'Heroic' N.J. State Trooper’s Car By Sean Neumann

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

US Patriot – Customized Army & Air Force OCP Uniforms

Dec 19, 2025 9:57 am

Paris, Tokyo cancel New Year’s Eve celebrations amid urgent safety concerns

Dec 19, 2025 9:45 am

Thousands gather as Bondi Beach reopens after attack on Hanukkah celebration

Dec 19, 2025 9:39 am

Thousands of Surfers and Swimmers at Bondi Beach Form Heart in Tribute to Victims of Mass Shooting at Hanukkah Event By Becca Longmire

Dec 19, 2025 9:31 am

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tactical, firearms and many more news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

I Carry: Smith & Wesson Model 10 Revolver in a Bianchi Holster

By news

Pregnant Inmate Surprised with Baby Shower in Jail by Sheriff's Office Before Giving Birth to Son By Becca Longmire

By Jack Bogart

US prisons battle evolving drones used to smuggle contraband to inmates

By Jack Bogart
Tactical Americans
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © 2025 Tactical Americans. Created by Sawah Solutions.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.