There have been "multiple" instances of drones entering the airspace at a Navy weapons station in New Jersey, officials said, as concern continues to grow over sightings.
Summary
Officials at Naval Weapons Station Earle in Colts Neck, New Jersey, confirmed multiple instances of unidentified drones entering the airspace above the base, though no direct threats have been identified.
Residents across northern New Jersey have reported sightings of large drones near critical infrastructure, including military sites, since mid-November.
Sen. Andy Kim, along with other lawmakers, has called for a federal investigation, urging the FBI and DHS to address public safety concerns and provide transparency.
The White House stated most drones appear lawful, but investigations are ongoing.
I used the wrong term here, I was thinking HPM. There is such a beast (high-power microwave weaponry, Google "Leonidas"), but they require massive amounts of energy and are very new tech (even to military). I'm sure if one had the proper degree of engineering and resources, they might be able to build one, but it would also be highly illegal.
A more realistic solution might be signal jammers/spoofers, but again, illegal in the US.
Just a while ago some weirdo in Germany got a Flak 88 confiscated from him. I'm sure there are more of them out there, and the airburst smokeclouds would look kinda rad
I just love that the ones they've looked into, were all people flying in legal areas.
It's a bunch of idiots who hopefully get attempted murder charges for firing weapons into the sky.
" I didn't think there was a person in it" isn't an ironclad excuse for firing a weapon at a vehicle of any kind. Let alone the fact they will NOT hit them, and they do stand a chance of killing civilians on the ground.
Edit: To throw in a fun fact. If you fire a 9mm pistol from the ground, it won't reach the average flight height of a helicopter (5000ft+). Which many of the photos appear to be manned helicopters. Aka attempted murder