Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Drones are now the delivery method of choice for contraband-craving Brit prisoners

Add as a preferred source on Google

The U.S. prison authorities have for some time been looking at ways to deal effectively with criminals using quadcopters to fly drugs and other supplies into jails, while across the pond their British counterparts are also facing similar challenges.

Just last week, for example, police in London seized two remotely controlled copters attempting to deliver contraband to inmates at Pentonville Prison in the north of the capital. Spotted in the early hours of August 14, one of the drones crashed after apparently having already delivered its illegal cargo. The other one, however, was intercepted mid-flight and found to be carrying a large stash of drugs and mobile phones (pictured), thedrone contraband Evening Standard reported.

Metropolitan Police
Recommended Videos

London’s Metropolitan Police said the problem of people using drones to deliver contraband to inmates is now so serious it’s set up a special unit, called “Operation Airborne,” to deal with the issue.

There were 33 known incidents involving drones and prisons in the U.K. last year, with some flights at Pentonville involving the quadcopters actually entering the prison building through broken windows.

In a case that ended up in court last year, a London man was jailed for 14 months for attempting to fly “a psychoactive substance and tobacco” into a prison.

As the U.S. grapples with the same issue, prison administrators are examining various solutions to bring an end to the illegal deliveries. A company called Dedrone, for example, offers the DroneTracker, which uses multiple methods to detect drones within 1,640 feet in any direction. Once identified, it’s then a case of either meeting the drone as it lands, taking control of the flight, or even blasting it out of the sky, possibly with a shoulder-mounted, net-firing bazooka.

Drone are clearly still proving useful for jailbirds desperate for supplies from the outside world, but with prison services finally waking up to the issue, it seems that more creative methods may once again have to be called upon to get the contraband delivered.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Research finds generative AI making frauds a cakewalk for bad actors
New research shows scams that once took hours now take minutes.
Concerned man with devices medium shot

Generative AI isn’t just changing how we work, but it’s also transforming how scams are pulled off. As per Vyntra’s 2026 report, tasks that once took fraudsters over 16 hours can now be done in under 5 minutes using generative AI tools.

That’s a massive shift. What used to require skill, time, and effort can now be automated and scaled almost instantly, turning fraud into what experts are calling a $400 billion global industry.

Read more
Study says AI chatbots are increasingly ignoring humans, but it isn’t quite Skynet yet
Artificial Intelligence

Isn’t it frustrating when you ask an AI chatbot something, and halfway through, it just goes off track? You might be discussing a simple technical fix, and suddenly it throws in random suggestions — things that don’t even exist or don’t make any sense. It’s confusing, and honestly, pretty annoying.

What makes it worse is that it often feels like the chatbot isn’t even paying attention to what you said. You give it clear details, but it either ignores them or responds with something completely unrelated. That’s exactly what this study points out. AI isn’t as reliable or “obedient” as we thought, and if you’ve used one for long enough, you’ve probably noticed it yourself.

Read more
I see Apple skipping the AI hellfire, but shaping Siri as the most flexible assistant
iPhone with Active Siri

When Apple introduced Siri back in 2011, the world freaked out. A personal assistant on a phone with conversational chops elicited an audible gasp from the audience, and plenty of fear. "That it’s a sinister, potentially alien artificial intelligence that’s bound to kill us all," CNN's coverage surmised. It was a one-of-a-kind advancement, something Apple was delivering consistently back then.

And then it fell off. Now, Siri has a reputation for being, well… not exactly the sharpest voice assistant, especially in a pool of next-gen generative AI assistants such as Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT. Anyone who’s tried asking it a tricky question knows exactly what I mean — it's a drag to talk with Siri, and more importantly, get work done. But things are starting to shake up. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, a prolific all-things-Apple eavesdropper, shared yesterday that Siri might soon open its doors to third-party AI tools in a major iOS update. That’s right! Apple’s walled garden could finally be cracking.

Read more