Careful, Hunters: PETA’s Drones May Be Watching You

http://mashable.com/2013/10/23/peta-drones/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=rss

Ar-drone-2.0

By Fran Berkman16 hours ago
Animal rights activists are promoting a new way to make sure game hunters don’t break the rules — but the tool itself may not be legal.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has introduced a surveillance drone called the “Air Angel,” which the organization is selling to anyone who wants to keep tabs on hunters. PETA debuted the Air Angel on Monday, the first day of bow hunting season in Massachusetts.

If watchers witness any illegal or cruel hunting practices, they can call the authorities and contact PETA to get the footage shared online, PETA spokeswoman Lindsay Rajt told Mashable. This can also help raise awareness about the cruelty of hunting, she said.

Rajt added that by using the hobby drone, activists could find out which Massachusetts hunters jumped the gun on their Monday morning expedition, which could not start until “one-half hour before sunrise,” according to state regulations. The drone users reported this alleged offense to the local authorities.

“[Authorities] were very receptive, and they said they were going to look into it,” Rajt said. “I think people should call in violations as they see them.”

Dennis Boomer Hayden, president of the Massachusetts Bowhunters Association, said he doesn’t see the point of these drones and called PETA’s efforts “redundant.”

“Hunters already have a police force that watch us, they’re called game wardens,” Hayden told Mashable. “Obviously, they more than protect the wildlife in Massachusetts. They would arrest a hunter if they were doing something wrong.”

Hayden also warned potential drone users that there is a law against harassing hunters in Massachusetts

Hayden also warned potential drone users that there is a law against harassing hunters in Massachusetts, under which it is illegal to both “drive or disturb wildlife or fish for the purpose of interrupting a lawful taking” and to “block, follow, impede or otherwise harass another who is engaged in the lawful taking of fish or wildlife.”

“Anybody that’s going to go out there and buy one of these things to go watch hunters, it’s a form of harassment, and they’re breaking the law,” Hayden said.

The Massachusetts Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs declined to comment on the matter.

Most other hunters don’t seem too excited about this new option for surveillance, either.

“This is just another of the ridiculous antics developed by PETA and other anti-hunting organizations,” reads a post about the drones on the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance’s website.

Kali Parmley, a communications specialist at the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance who wrote the blog post, did not reply to our inquiry.

Drones, or unmanned aerial vehicles, have sparked a great deal of controversy lately. The Obama administration has used them as its signature weapon in the war against terrorism. Other groups have found more peaceful uses for drones, such as monitoring warlords in Africa, delivering textbooks to Australian students, rescuing victims of heart attacks and even delivering pizza.

PETA is selling the Air Angel for $325 on its website. Rajt insists the organization isn’t earning a profit from the sales.

The aircraft is actually a Parrot AR Drone 2.0 with custom decals that read, “Air Angels: Protecting Wildlife With Drones.” The description of the device on PETA’s website describes its possible uses:

Using your hobby drone, you can collect instant to-your-phone video footage of hunters engaging in illegal activity, such as drinking while in possession of a firearm, injuring animals and failing to pursue them, and illegally using spotlights, feed lures, and other nasty but common hunting tricks. Your amateur footage can be used to alert game wardens and other authorities to who is doing what to animals.

“As a hunter with a high-powered rifle, I can see this getting very very expensive … for PETA, that is,” wrote a commenter with the username “Buck” on the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance blog post. This sentiment was a common thread.

5 thoughts on “Careful, Hunters: PETA’s Drones May Be Watching You

  1. I see this as a wonderful tool to survey swamps for illegal hunting and check traplines to injured animals, even your own pet!
    If hunters shoot your drone, it will be on camera on your phone, not just the drone. If you are on your own personal posted property, you have every right to use your drone. Beside posting your footage, you should send it to your state’s version of fish and wildlife.
    I have written recently about the use of drones. Both by the state and by private citizens. If you have to bend the law just a little to save an endangered species from being killed or tortured by wolf haters, killed slowly and painfully, I think the evidence will be more important to wardens than how you got it because these wolf-haters don’t want to get caught by wardens so wardens are a target to them and the wardens know it! Much can be said for making friends with local police and wardens. They are stretched thin as it is. They have seen so much wanton waste and animal abuse and their access to drones is extremely limited. For example, the State of Maine is huge and they only own one drone which has to be shared with the MDEA and Game Wardens.
    A couple things you need to know… weed growers use drones. If they know you are only saving animals and have no interest in their grow, most won’t shoot down your drone.
    Also, before you buy one, check if it will work with your cell phone and if you have signal in the area! Good luck, this will save animals and may even get some footage of those psychopathic wolf-haters so game wardens can fine them, take away their weapons and even other personal property!
    Don’t get too close to wolves, they are shy and can get PTSD.

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