DHS Awards Contract For Detecting Aerial Drug Smuggling

By Jill Replogle
August 15, 2012

Customs and Border Patrol
An ultralight aircraft apprehended by U.S. Customs and Border Protection in Southern Arizona in 2008. The aicraft was carrying 223 pounds of marijuana according to CBP.
The New York company SRCTec received a nearly $100 million contract to provide the U.S. Department of Homeland Security with sensor technology to detect ultralight drug smuggling planes along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Smugglers fly tiny, one-person planes across the border by night and drop their loads in remote pickup areas along the border. They’re difficult to detect, frustrating law enforcement agents.

Imperial County, Calif. and the border area near Tucson, Ariz. are major corridors for ultralight drug smuggling activity.

Data gleaned from the new detection system will be transmitted to the Air and Marine Operations Center in Riverside, Calif.

CBP first sought out ultralight detection technology as part of the Secure Border Initiative, a program created under the Bush Administration to bring high-tech solutions to the problem of illegal border crossings and drug trafficking.

The program was scrapped after an expensive system of radars, which planned to cover the entire U.S.-Mexico border, proved ineffective. At a conference of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International held in February, Mark Borkowski, Assistant Commissioner for CBP’s Office of Technology Innovation and Acquisition, said the agency would be more cautious in the future when purchasing new technology.