Drone detectors in New Jersey have found 'little or no evidence' of
wrongdoing, governor says
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[December 17, 2024]
By DAVE COLLINS and MIKE CATALINI
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Drone-detecting devices deployed in New Jersey in
the past week have found “little to no evidence” of anything nefarious
or threatening, Gov. Phil Murphy said Monday as calls grew for action to
address the mysterious nighttime sightings of suspected unmanned flights
across the northeastern U.S.
Murphy told reporters in Trenton that there were 12 sightings of
suspected drones in the state on Saturday and one on Sunday. He declined
to go into detail about the detection equipment, but said it was
powerful enough to disable the drones, although he added that is not
legal on U.S. soil.
Murphy, a Democrat, echoed calls by state officials elsewhere for
Congress to allow them to deal with drones. Nearly all the power now
rests with the federal government.
"It is extraordinary to me that, that a nation as great as ours and as
powerful as ours has the deficiencies that we have now seen in living
color as it relates to drone incursions,” Murphy said.
Federal officials, including Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro
Mayorkas, have repeatedly said there are no signs that any drone
operators have shown bad intent, nor is there evidence of foreign
involvement.
“There’s no question that people are seeing drones,” Mayorkas told ABC’s
George Stephanopoulos on Sunday. “But I want to assure the American
public that we are on it. We are working in close coordination with
state and local authorities.”
But that hasn't reassured everyone. Conspiracy theories about foreign
actors, the U.S. government and the “deep state,” abound online, while
elected officials concerned about threats to military bases, airports
and other locations have increased their calls for federal officials to
act.
The skeptics include President-elect Donald Trump, who suggested Monday
that "the government knows what is happening.”
“Our military knows and our president knows and for some reason they
want to keep people in suspense,” Trump said. He refused to say whether
he had been briefed on the drone sightings.
New Jersey Sen. Andy Kim, a Democrat, told The Associated Press that
officials could do a better job helping the public to understand what is
going on, especially when people wrongly conclude they are seeing
unmanned aircraft.
“What the public could use is like walking through that rather than
just, you know, as a statement that says nothing, nothing to be
concerned about,” he said. "I think it’s reached a level of just public
attention that some greater level of depth is necessary.”
Kim said he’s heard no supporting evidence for the president-elect's
statement Monday that information is being withheld and that a lack of
faith in institutions is playing a key part in the saga.
“Nothing that I’m seeing, nothing that I’ve engaged in gives me any
impression of that nature. But like, I get it, some people won’t believe
me, right? Because that’s the level of distrust that we face.”
Over the past two days, New York and Pennsylvania officials have also
requested drone-detecting equipment from federal officials.
"It is imperative our communities in Pennsylvania are protected and
questions on the presence of these drones are answered,” U.S. Rep. Brian
Fitzpatrick, a Pennsylvania Republican, wrote in a letter to Mayorkas on
Monday. "State-of-the-art radar systems will provide insights into where
these drones are deploying from and what the motives for their flights
may be.”
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This photo provided by Trisha Bushey shows the evening sky and
points of light near in Lebanon Township, N.J., on Thursday, Dec. 5,
2024. (Trisha Bushey via AP)
After reports of drones in Connecticut, state police said they were
monitoring drone activity and state officials said analysts were
comparing reported sightings with federal flight data.
“One of the drone sightings had the word Frontier on the back, that
was an airline,” Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont, a Democrat, said
Monday. “But some of them are big and unexplained and we’re going to
get to the bottom of this. Right now, what we do is we make sure
that our security and airports are secure.”
At a media briefing on Monday, the Pentagon's press secretary, Air
Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, said defense officials have seen no
indication that the drones flying over multiple locations in the
U.S. are being controlled by a foreign country. According to the
Federal Aviation Administration, he said, there are approximately 1
million registered drones in the U.S. and about 8,000 are flying any
given day.
Ryder said that while military bases overseas can use surveillance
methods that quickly address the origin of drones, that power is
limited in U.S. airspace because of domestic surveillance laws. He
said most drones are operated through either radio frequency
transmissions or satellite-guided GPS navigation, which can provide
information about the operators. If they're not controlled by those
methods, that's another clue, he said.
“So I’m kind of talking around it because I don’t necessarily want
to get into talking classified capabilities, but the bottom line is
that all of that gives us an idea that, hey, these are not foreign
origin," Ryder said.
Christopher Stadulis, a retired New York City firefighter and drone
hobbyist, said he's seen clusters of drones near his home in Clinton
Township, New Jersey. He said the lights he has seen at night are
different from those used by commercial airlines, and the drones he
has seen are very large.
“When you look at what I’m seeing with the naked eye, you can see
it’s not a normal aircraft,” he said in a recent interview. "This
and we don’t have this much traffic, you know, usually on any given
night in this area. So it seems like definitely some of them are
aircraft that we can’t explain what they are.”
More suspected drone sightings over the weekend led to a temporary
airspace shutdown at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton,
Ohio, for about four hours late Friday into Saturday, and the
arrests of two men in Boston accused of flying a drone “dangerously
close” to Logan International Airport.
U.S. Rep. Josh Gottheimer, a New Jersey Democrat, said Monday that
he is introducing legislation calling on federal officials to
provide public briefings on what they know about the drones and
calling for a drone air traffic control system similar to those used
for planes. He also wants law enforcement to be given access to
drone detectors and the authority to “take out drones that shouldn't
be in the air."
“I believe the people I represent and, as I’ve been saying for some
time now, the people in New Jersey and around the country deserve
answers,” he said in a statement. “They deserve transparency from
their government.”
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Collins reported from Hartford, Connecticut. Associated Press
writers John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, Tara Copp in Washington and
Joseph B. Frederick in New York City contributed to this report.
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