A veteran drone pilot in New Jersey has stepped forward to demonstrate how advanced the state’s mystery drones are compared to regular consumer models.
The pilot known to fans of his paranormal investigative series “Terror Talk” as Michael B witnessed his own drone crash and burn when he attempted to fly it near one of the many still unexplained drone UFOs. sent throughout the state.
“When this started I was trying to get my drone over Picatinny Arsenal to track a drone that was just hovering there,” Michael explained, “and as I got closer my drone lost power, spun out, the battery died and he broke down. .’
“But the other drone,” he noted ominously, “remained in the air untouched.”
Picatinny Arsenal, a U.S. military base with military research and production facilities, has proven to be the root of the bizarre drone crisis in the Garden State.
Armory officials recently revealed that air raids over their base began five days earlier than previously reported, with a base police officer making a confirmed sighting on November 13.
What makes these mysterious drone flights so worrying, according to Michael B, is that sensitive locations such as Picatinny Arsenal and major US airports already have drone jamming technology that prevents commercial drones from entering their airspace.
The “Terror Talk” host even demonstrated how similar FAA-mandated jamming capabilities prevent models like his from even taking off near local airports.
Pentagon and U.S. intelligence officials are “playing dumb,” he argued — and know more about these strange craft than they let on.
A veteran drone pilot in New Jersey has stepped forward to demonstrate how advanced the state’s mysterious drones (seen above) really are compared to consumer models
What makes these mysterious drone flights (examples above) so worrying, according to this drone pilot, is that sensitive locations like Picatinny Arsenal and major US airports already have drone jamming technology that prevents commercial drones from entering their airspace.
To demonstrate the government’s drone deterrent capabilities, Michael B brought his DJI-branded quadcopter to a parking lot near Morristown Municipal Airport, a local flight corridor that has gained national fame thanks to President Trump’s use.
Newly elected President Donald Trump’s Bedminster gold rate has also become a worrying hotspot of mysterious drone sightings during the past month.
With his camera pointed at his DJI remote controls, Michael B showed it off MSNBC host Alex Witt exactly what the FAA transfers look like on a store-bought drone display.
“We’ve set up in a parking lot about a quarter mile from the airport,” Michael B explained, “and I’m trying to get permission to take the drone and see what the other drone is – but I can’t.”
“Restricted,” he continued, noticing the warning chime on his drone’s controls.
“I tried to work around it,” he added. “At one point they even asked for my phone number and I said, ‘No. I think we’re in a good place at this point.”
Witt asked Michael B, “What do you think that is?” What do you think people see in the sky? And why only at night?’
“Right now I think someone knows what they are,” Michael B replied.
The Terror Talk host also noted that he has technology to detect objects in the air. “None of these things we’re going after are on the flight radar.”
To demonstrate the government’s drone deterrent capabilities, the pilot took a DJI-branded drone to a parking lot near Morristown Airport, a local flight corridor that has gained national fame thanks to Trump’s use. “Limited,” he noted, pointing to his drone’s controls
The drone pilot – known to fans of his paranormal investigative series ‘Terror Talk’ as Michael B (pictured) – witnessed his own drone crash and burn when he tried to steer it near one of the many unexplained drone UFOs that have flooded NJ. The mysterious drone was ‘unaffected’
Michael B told MSNBC that he believes the government is deliberately keeping the truth about the unidentified drones in New Jersey a mystery.
The real answers, he said, are likely “secrets that the government doesn’t want us to know … neither that nor aliens.”
‘At this point I think someone knows what they are,” he told the station.
“What they could be – I have no idea,” the paranormal investigator admitted, although he emphasized that he considered it a personal mission to continue monitoring the state’s mysterious drones to get answers.
The FBI has filed more than 5,000 complaints over the course of this drone UFO wave, but noted that only 100 of these cases now warrant further investigation.
The US Department of Homeland Security official also noted that sightings due to the massive concern about the drones have led to many false positives.
“We believe that many of the reported drone sightings are in fact manned aircraft misidentified as drones,” DHS officials said.
But the cases over sensitive military bases and U.S. Coast Guard vessels off the coast of Jersey continue to concern state officials, federal investigators and the U.S. military.
The FBI and other agencies are investigating the strange activity, but a Department of Homeland Security representative said Wednesday, December 11, “We no longer have any information about where these drones are coming from, where they’re coming from, where they’re coming from. they land’
Officials and residents have also seen some truly strange, well-lit drones that don’t look like fixed-wing aircraft (example above), adding to the mystery of the spacecraft’s origins and purpose.
Picatinny Arsenal told the press that sightings of the unidentified drones, which are capable of defeating their counter-drone defenses, have now risen to 11 confirmed cases.
“While the source and cause of these aircraft operating in our area remain unknown,” said Picatinny’s garrison commander, Lt. Col. Craig A. Bonham II, “we can confirm that they are not the result of any Picatinny Arsenal-related activities. ‘
Amid the uncertainty, the president-elect called for answers from the US government as he criticized the Biden administration and urged them to shoot down the UFOs.
But this was rejected by DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who said the government does not have the authority to neutralize the drones.