PETA Plans to Fly Drones That Would 'Stalk Hunters'

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Hey Gang.

Been a while since I made any posts but came across this article and had a "smh" moment and thought I should share it with the rest of you. What will they think of next? :rolleyes:

[FONT=Verdana,Arial] [h=2]PETA Plans to Fly Drones That Would 'Stalk Hunters'[/h]
Now what could possibly go wrong with this????
spinsmile.gif


FE_PR_130408CinestarOcto425x283.jpg

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals is actively shopping for a drone that would "stalk hunters," the organization said Monday.

The group says it will "soon have some impressive new weapons at its disposal to combat those who gun down deer and doves" and that it is "shopping for one or more drone aircraft with which to monitor those who are out in the woods with death on their minds."

The group says it will not weaponize the drones, but will use them to film potentially illegal hunting activity and turn it over to law enforcement.

"The talk is usually about drones being used as killing machines, but PETA drones will be used to save lives," PETA President Ingrid E. Newkirk said in a statement.

They are currently considering purchasing the CineStar Octocopter, which is capable of carrying a DSLR camera for up to 5 minutes. With smaller cameras, the drone can fly for about 20 minutes. The group says it also hopes to fly drones over factory farms, fishing spots and "other venues where animals routinely suffer and die."

In order to legally operate the drone, it will likely need a certificate of authorization from the Federal Aviation Administration, a process which can take several months.

Kaitlynn Kelly, a representative for PETA, tells U.S. News that they will soon seek FAA approval but that they "hope this won't be an issue," and that they plan to have permission to fly beginning in the fall.

"We're not releasing the locations that we have in mind, but we will look into the Northeast, bighorn sheep hunts and bowhunts because those are especially cruel," she says.

The group may want to carefully monitor its drone—last year, an animal rights group drone was shot down while it was attempting to monitor pigeon hunters in South Carolina.
http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/...-stalk-hunters



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If it is considered a weapon, I will be defending myself if I ever see one.

Does shoot, shovel and shut-up apply to drones as well. ;)

But more realistically , they will wind up with more fines and legal trouble then they could shake a stick at, start spying on legal activities and see where that goes.
 
Be suprised if that happend in my life time ... even if it does, it wont work out for them. I encourage them to waste there time and money on that piece of sh**it
 
It flies 5 - 20 minutes, assuming a return trip, the controller is never more than 10 minutes away. That means the controller must be actively tracking the hunter. So who's actually doing the stalking. Are there laws against that?
 
I hope PETA have a good deal on them drones because I can see this getting pretty expensive real quick! :D
 
It flies 5 - 20 minutes, assuming a return trip, the controller is never more than 10 minutes away. That means the controller must be actively tracking the hunter. So who's actually doing the stalking. Are there laws against that?

That is actually a valid question. This would be totally "ok" if they we're trying to catch poachers that we're hunting game out of season... but to sneak up on someone legally hunting, I would personally shoot it out of the sky myself, find the pilot, get his name and be speaking to a lawyer.
 
That is actually a valid question. This would be totally "ok" if they we're trying to catch poachers that we're hunting game out of season... but to sneak up on someone legally hunting, I would personally shoot it out of the sky myself, find the pilot, get his name and be speaking to a lawyer.

Harassing hunters is illegal in BC, I don't know about the ROC though.

Open season on PITA as far as I'm concerned.
 
hey gang.

Been a while since i made any posts but came across this article and had a "smh" moment and thought i should share it with the rest of you. What will they think of next? :rolleyes:

[font=verdana,arial] [h=2]peta plans to fly drones that would 'stalk hunters'[/h]
now what could possibly go wrong with this????
spinsmile.gif


fe_pr_130408cinestarocto425x283.jpg

people for the ethical treatment of animals is actively shopping for a drone that would "stalk hunters," the organization said monday.

The group says it will "soon have some impressive new weapons at its disposal to combat those who gun down deer and doves" and that it is "shopping for one or more drone aircraft with which to monitor those who are out in the woods with death on their minds."

the group says it will not weaponize the drones, but will use them to film potentially illegal hunting activity and turn it over to law enforcement.

"the talk is usually about drones being used as killing machines, but peta drones will be used to save lives," peta president ingrid e. Newkirk said in a statement.

They are currently considering purchasing the cinestar octocopter, which is capable of carrying a dslr camera for up to 5 minutes. With smaller cameras, the drone can fly for about 20 minutes. The group says it also hopes to fly drones over factory farms, fishing spots and "other venues where animals routinely suffer and die."

in order to legally operate the drone, it will likely need a certificate of authorization from the federal aviation administration, a process which can take several months.

Kaitlynn kelly, a representative for peta, tells u.s. News that they will soon seek faa approval but that they "hope this won't be an issue," and that they plan to have permission to fly beginning in the fall.

"we're not releasing the locations that we have in mind, but we will look into the northeast, bighorn sheep hunts and bowhunts because those are especially cruel," she says.

The group may want to carefully monitor its drone—last year, an animal rights group drone was shot down while it was attempting to monitor pigeon hunters in south carolina.
http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/...-stalk-hunters



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boooom ! ! ! ! ! !! Oooooppppss ! ! ! Was that your dumbassed drone?????????? Eeeeefffffff yoooo, petards ! ! ! ! !
 
I doubt it would work. I forsee alot of inamissible evidence, shot down drones, and ect....

Is it trespasing for the drone to film someone on there own land?
Im sure there is a law prohibitting someone from filming there neighbours, lol.
 
Shooting them down would get expensive really quick.. Those drones are anywhere from 3k-5k+. Depends on GPS, motors, frame and cameras. Plus they need a Ham license to fly them FPV. I've been looking into buying one. :)
 
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