Drone carrying drugs, phones crashes in prison yard

Terell Wilkins | The Arizona Republic

Show Caption Hide Caption Drone crashes in Buckeye prison yard Officials with the Arizona Department of Corrections are investigating after a drone carrying drugs and cellphones crashed in a secure zone at Arizona State Prison Complex-Lewis in Buckeye on Sept. 24, 2017.

PHOENIX — An attempt to deliver a load of drugs and cellphones to inmates at an Arizona prison failed when the drone carrying the contraband crashed in a yard accessible only to corrections officers.

The Arizona Department of Corrections said Thursday it is still trying to determine who was behind the botched delivery Sept. 24.

It was the first known incident involving a drone at an Arizona state prison, according to corrections spokesman Andrew Wilder.

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A homemade aerial drone flew over Arizona State Prison Complex-Lewis in Buckeye in the early morning and crashed in a security zone inaccessible to inmates.

Wilder said correctional officers at the facility discovered the drone after it crashed and confiscated the contraband, which had been tied up in an orange sweatshirt. Inside were two cellphones and several freezer bags filled with marijuana, images show.

The items were sent to the state crime lab for fingerprint and DNA analysis, but investigators have not been able to locate the origin of the drone, Wilder said.

Similar incidents have taken place at other correctional facilities across the country, including at federal correctional facilities in Louisiana and Texas.

In July 2015, a fight broke out at Mansfield Correctional Institution in Ohio when a drone dropped tobacco, marijuana and heroin to an inmate at the prison, sparking an altercation, according to a CNN report.

All airspace around prisons is federally restricted so flying any item, including drones, near the facilities is prohibited, Wilder said. Attempting to smuggle drugs and cellphones into prisons is a felony crime.

Wilder said corrections officials are evaluating existing technology to potentially combat drones, but "there is no better existing weapon against the importation of illegal contraband in correctional facilities than heightened staff awareness and vigilance.

"Our Correctional Officers do an excellent job at that already, which may explain why bad guys are turning to new methods such as drones to try to get illegal contraband inside prisons," he added.

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