Bill Seeks to Restrict Drones

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JIM PROVANCE
SOURCE: THE BLADE, TOLEDO, OHIO

June 18–COLUMBUS — If unmanned drones are going to hover over Ohioans’ heads, state law has to catch up with them, a lawmaker argues.

State Rep. Rex Damschroder, the Fremont Republican and pilot, has introduced a bill that would, except in certain emergencies, prohibit any law enforcement agency from using unmanned aircraft for surveillance without first obtaining a search warrant.

Absent that warrant, any evidence obtained from the use of a wide array of small, lightweight, camera-equipped drones could not be used in court.

“It’s a new industry, and we want to be on the leading edge of it, but I don’t want government infringing on our Fourth Amendment rights,” Mr. Damschroder said. “Government can’t come into your house (without a warrant), but they can come into your backyard, even if you have a high privacy fence.

“I don’t want the camel to get its nose under the tent,” he said. “It’s easier to restrict its use before it starts. With texting and e-mailing, the government is on notice that a lot of Americans aren’t happy with the way government is snooping and digging into their privacy.”

Mention drones and most people think of the sleek, airplane-like craft that the military has used to bomb militant targets and gather intelligence in the mountains of Afghanistan and Pakistan. But the Federal Aviation Administration has been opening up more airspace to non-military use of the technology for craft resembling anything from a remote-controlled model helicopter used by the Medina County sheriff’s office to the small, Styrofoam bat-like craft that the Ohio Department of Transportation uses for aerial topography imaging.

http://www.aviationpros.com/news/10962875/if-unmanned-drones-are-going-to-hover-over-ohioans-heads-state-law-has-to-catch-up-with-them-a-lawmaker-argues

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