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Thursday, August 13, 2015

Drone Hovers Outside Woman's Bedroom-- 'No Laws Broken'

It sounded like a loud fan blowing right outside her second floor bedroom window. The Hawaii Kai woman, who didn't want her name used, says it woke her up early Monday morning.

"There were these green and red LED's that were coming from the whirring thing and I quickly realized it was a drone outside my bedroom," she says the drone hovered above the privacy curtain for a few seconds. When she walked toward it, it flew off.

The woman called Honolulu Police and the officer did a police report, but what happened wasn't a crime.

"She was very empathetic and pretty mortified also," says the woman about the officer, "I could tell she really cared, but I could tell that she felt the same helplessness that I felt."

There are federal laws that deal with drones but those are height restrictions and no fly zones. There are Fourth Amendment issues if a drone videotapes someone in a bathroom, or changing, but nothing regarding drones hovering outside a home.

"You're watching somebody sleep, that's pretty incredible what an invasion of privacy that is," says the woman, who is concerned about the operator's motives, "Were they looking at us, or looking at the house to maybe burglarize it later?"

"For a drone, nothing is enforced yet except height restrictions and (using it) in crowds," says Shane Lawler, owner of Drones Plus Hawaii, "As far as you going and spying on someone there's no specific rule on that."

More here

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

There is also no law that says I can't shoot it down if it's invading my private space.

Anonymous said...

I would think that would fall under the same category as a "Peeping Tom". Isn't that against the law?

Anonymous said...

But here is an interesting tidbit if anyone is interested.For about 3 years high speed drones have been able to fly past a window in a building an photograph every detail inside.You might only see a flash go by (if that),but every single detail inside within the drones' field of vision has been recorded.

Anonymous said...

10:39 AM

And just wait when people start getting locked up for crimes they may or may not have committed months, years before someone looked at the video recordings...

Wait until some tech looks at the video from those drones by the police or govt and watch and see if you won't get locked up or investigated for handing someone head ache pills...

NO different than the movie minority report where you got locked up for thinking of something...

Anonymous said...

Actually it is m.d.o.p on the drone. Drowning where you live my get a gun charge.

Anonymous said...

Nope is doesn't.

Anonymous said...

10:39 citation please.

Anonymous said...

20 years in jail and $250,000 dollar fine for shooting at aircraft in the NAS. FAA defined UAV's as aircraft back in 2012. Few people already in jail for shooting at UAV's.

Anonymous said...

I fly mine over the nude beach down on the Natl. Seashore in VA.

Anonymous said...

Can you say "curtains"?

Anonymous said...

I see "Meat Curtains", at the nude beach!

Anonymous said...

Any hotties or not to so much

Anonymous said...

Do not conduct surveillance or photograph persons in areas where there is an expectation of privacy without the individual's permission

Anonymous said...

There are other ways to shoot than with a gun. I have a slingshot that would blow a drone to bits.