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ATF spent $600,000 on faulty drones that were never used, watchdog finds | |
(2 months later) | |
The US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives spent about $600,000 on six drones that had so many defects they were never used for video surveillance as planned, and were eventually ditched, the justice department’s internal watchdog reported on Wednesday. | |
The Office of the Inspector General said it was “troubled” that the ATF, a justice department agency, spent money between September 2011 and September 2012 on drones that were rendered unsuitable. | |
ATF officials spent $315,000 on one gas-powered drone that was never used “due to multiple technical defects”, the audit found. | |
In other instances, a $90,000 drone was found to be unreliable and another model had a flight battery time of only 20 minutes, less than half the time the manufacturer claimed. | |
The ATF did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The report did not name the manufacturer of the six faulty drones, which were eventually given away to the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, the report said. | |
After discovering these problems, the ATF suspended its drone program in June 2014. But a week later, another unit in the ATF spend $15,000 on five drones. The report did not say whether those drones had operational problems, but they have since been grounded pending further guidance, according to inspectors. |