A Wallaceburg man has been fined after Chatham-Kent police say he operated a drone in the community back in April and didn’t register the drone.
On April 3,shortly after 10 p.m. the Chatham-Kent Police Service Traffic Management Unit was investigating a fatal motor vehicle collision on Dufferin Avenue Wallaceburg.
Police say the man observed the locked-down scene and deployed the drone to video the scene from the air.
As ambulance and police rushed the victim to the hospital, the drone operator flew the drone alongside the ambulance, police say. The man continued operating the drone outside Sydenham District Hospital as the patient was brought into the hospital.
An Ornge air ambulance was en route and flying toward the hospital as the drone was in the air only a short distance from the helicopter landing site, police say.
This video was uploaded to YouTube along with several other videos taken by the drone.
Police were made aware of the video and a drone operator with the CKPS Unmanned Aerial System Unit was assigned to investigate.
In partnership with Transport Canada, the drone operator was identified and interviewed, according to police.
As a result of the investigation, a 33-year-old Wallaceburg man has been charged by Transport Canada with contravening section 901.02 of the Canadian Aviation Regulations – operating a remotely piloted aircraft system without it being registered.
He received a $250 fine.
Const. Josh Flikweert, a drone operator with the police service, reminds drone operators, “with the advent of small, affordable drones, more people are flying them, resulting in an increased number of remotely piloted aircraft in the air. Drone operators should be aware that there are a number of rules and regulations that dictate how and where the drones can be flown. It is your responsibility to familiarize yourself with these before you fly your drone. Non-compliance will be investigated and you may be issued a fine or lose your license to fly. These guidelines are there to keep everyone safe so that we all can enjoy having these aircraft in the air.”