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The sparse expanses of Northeast
Colorado have become ground zero for a bizarre mystery surrounding sightings of
nighttime coordinated flights of groups of drones. From roughly 7 pm to 10 pm
every night last week, an estimated 17 drones with six-foot spans have flown
"grid patterns" over Phillips County and near its border with
neighboring Yuma County, according to Phillips County Sheriff Thomas Elliott.
The drones operate at a few hundred feet in the air and were brightly lit with
strobing colored and white lights, leaving local residents and those driving
through the area baffled.
The Denver Post was
first to report on the string of strange sightings. Local law enforcement, the
FAA, DEA, U.S. Army, and the Air Force have said they have no idea what these
aircraft are or who they belong to.
The Denver Post writes:
The
sheriff’s office can’t explain where the drones are coming from or who is
flying them. The estimated size and number of drones makes it unlikely that
they’re being flown by hobbyists, Undersheriff William Myers said.
On
Friday, Myers said he watched eight of the large drones flying along the Yuma
County border near the intersection of U.S. 385 and County Road 54. At the same
time, a single drone hovered about 25 miles away over the town of Paoli — it
didn’t move all night, just hovered over the town — and eight more drones flew
over Haxtun, about 10 miles down the road from Paoli, Myers said.
“Overhead
they were probably doing 30, 40 mph,” he said. “They weren’t racing or flying
around with speed.”
One
resident who spotted a drone last week gave chase, Elliott said, driving behind
it at about 50 mph, but lost the drone when he ran out of gas in Washington
County.
The
machines fly too high to be heard from the ground but can be seen by their
strobing white lights along with red, blue and green lights, Myers said.
“The
way Colorado law is written, none of the statutes fit for harassment or
trespassing,” Myers said. “Colorado hasn’t gotten on board with identifying the
airspace around your property as the actual premises, so we don’t have anything
we could charge.”
The FAA
does have rules for drones that weigh less than 55 pounds and requires such
aircraft to be flown during daylight hours, within sight of the pilot, no
higher than 400 feet above the ground, and not over people, among other rules.
However, pilots can apply for and receive waivers from the FAA that exempts the
pilots from many of those rules.
It’s
also not clear whether the drones over Phillips and Yuma counties would be
governed by those regulations. A drone the size of the ones spotted over the
counties likely would weigh more than 55 pounds, Moss said. That means the
drone operator would be flying commercially and would likely need to be a
“manned aviator” — an actual pilot, Moss said.
Elliott
said Monday that the sheriff’s office has received nine calls about the drones
since last week. He said residents no longer need to call to report a simple
sighting of the drones.
“We
just want to know if one lands, if we can get our hands on it, or if they see
someone operating them, that’s what we’re looking for now,” he said. “We know
they exist.”
I think people will wonder why there
is no video that we know of these sightings. Most amateur video shot of lights
in the sky at night has very little value, but regardless, you have to remember
that this is happening in very sparsely populated areas after
dark. If it was occurring near an urban area, I think the lack of video would
be a bit troubling, but in this case, I don't find it to be, especially
considering the level of law enforcement knowledge of these events.
People seeing lights in the sky that
they don't understand the origin of happens often, but this case seems far more
consistent over a short timespan than something that could be easily blown off.
Once again, the fact that law enforcement is well aware of it and discussing it
as fact is also telling. This all begs the question, what is going on in this
remote section of Colorado?
Based strictly on the descriptions conveyed, it sounds like someone or some group is testing a broad-area
surveillance capability with lower-end autonomous drones. This could include
something as simple as having a group fly a series of planned routes and return
with the information gathered via autopilot. By doing so, a group of
small, relatively inexpensive drones can cover a large area quickly instead of
single, far more expensive assets that could take more time and offer less
redundancy. Such a capability could be used for search and rescue, mapping, and
general intelligence gathering. This also doesn't require man-in-the-loop
control that would necessitate line-of-sight connectivity. Still, it is really
flat terrain with endless farmland in the area where the sightings occurred,
which means line-of-sight connectivity could be maximized, especially with the
help of a large aerial or small tower, but the grid pattern nature of these
flights that the Sheriff describes point to a coordinated and automated flight
plan for the drones.
The airspace where this is occurring
is peculiarly desolate, as well, making it ideally suited for such a task, but
the flights are not legally occurring, which makes the whole affair quite
suspicious. The fact that the activity is happening after sundown is even more
intriguing and adds to the notion that whoever is doing this knows it is
outside the bounds of FAA regulations.
In addition, it would be very
challenging to trace these aircraft back to their place of origin or point of
flight termination. The drones could fly the majority of their missions with
lights on and turn them off during launch and recovery. With very little
ambient light, they would be all but undetectable to the naked eye. Also,
remember that drones this size can takeoff from very small areas, so it's not
like a runway is needed or anything like that. As such, they can originate from
nearly anywhere.
VFRMAP.COM
This is basically the area where the
sightings are occurring. It's largely uncontrolled airspace with a very sparse
population.
VFRMAP.COM
Here you can see the relationship of
the area of activity in relation to Denver and nearby Nebraska.
The
reality is that an individual or small group with some resources can do
this. It doesn't need to be a federal agency, the military, or some defense or
aviation contractor. Although it all sounds relatively innocuous, it is
possibly yet another sign of the potential threats small, commercially
available unmanned aircraft pose. If the grid pattern reports are
accurate and autonomous waypoint navigation is being used by these drones, it
can be posited that similar basic concepts of operation were used in the
game-changing attack on Saudi oil
facilities in September. Furthermore, drones of this size can
carry a relevant payload of deadly explosives instead of surveillance or electronic warfare gear.
17 drones flying at once that can surveil a broad area could be re-roled by a
nefarious actor to strike 17 pinpoint fixed targets
near-simultaneously, or swarm against a single high value one from
multiple directions.
This is
the same drum I have been beating for years, and eventually, this threat will
materialize in the continental United States as it has overseas.
With that in mind, this type of event—which we will only see more of in the
future—shouldn't be treated as just some interesting curiosity. There is no
need to panic, but the mystery behind these aircraft should be solved and
whoever is doing it should receive some sort of penalty for executing these
types of operations outside of FAA regulations, even if there isn't a dark
agenda behind the activity.
Some will say this is an overreaction,
but those are probably the same people that laughed when some of us started
warning of the potential threat of small drones being used unlawfully and
for very negative purposes years ago.
Regardless, a skyborne mystery is
afoot in Colorado. It will be interesting to see if the flights continue and if
the description of these sightings holds up.
We will keep you updated as we find
out more about these strange events.
It is worth noting that not far where
these drones were sighted, F.E. Warren Air Force Base's intercontinental
ballistic missile fields begin. Roughly 30 miles northwest of Haxtun. It is
something to at least keep in mind as the story unfolds.
USAF
Contact
the author: Tyler@thedrive.com
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