Via azcentral.com -
Homeland-security officials will expand the use of drone aircraft, a key tool in the government's border strategy, despite a safety investigation highlighting a string of errors in the crash of a $6.5 million pilotless plane in Arizona last year.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection operates two Predator B drones near the Mexican border, both out of Fort Huachuca. By the end of next year, six will fly along the northern and southern borders of the U.S. Three will be in Arizona.
The agency said it will forge ahead with its plans to introduce more drones despite a National Transportation Safety Board finding this week that human error caused the April 2006 crash near Nogales. It was the first crash of a drone aircraft on domestic soil. The customs agency said it agreed with the findings but considers the drones essential.
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How exactly does this stop illegals (and/or people that want to harm America) from entering the nation?
Great, not only will we have TV cameras filming people easily crossing the border, we will have additional video in different wavelengths to watch people illegally entering our country.
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