Attorney General Wilson Joins 21-State Coalition Requesting Drone Interception Authority for State and Local Law Enforcement
Summary
Attorney General Alan Wilson joined a 21-state coalition letter to the Trump administration requesting that state and local law enforcement be granted authority to detect, track, and disable drones that are illegally delivering contraband into prisons. The letter addresses a gap in federal law, which currently restricts drone interdiction authority to a narrow set of federal agencies. The coalition recommends that the Task Force led by Dr. Gorka work with federal agencies to grant carefully defined authority for state and local officials to address this public safety threat.
What changed
A coalition of 21 state attorneys general has sent a letter requesting expanded authority for state and local law enforcement to combat the growing problem of drones illegally delivering contraband—including narcotics, weapons, and cell phones—into correctional facilities. Under current federal law, only a narrow set of federal agencies are authorized to detect, track, and mitigate unauthorized drones, leaving correctional officials without legal authority to intervene in real time.
State attorneys general are urging the Task Force to work with federal agencies to grant carefully defined authority to state and local law enforcement to disable or intercept drones before they reach prisons. The letter emphasizes that this illegal activity poses severe public safety threats, including addiction, violence, overdoses, assaults, and continued criminal enterprises by incarcerated individuals. No specific compliance deadline is stated as this is a policy request rather than an enacted regulation.
Source document (simplified)
MAR 30, 2026
Attorney General Alan Wilson pushes for state, local authority to combat illegal drone drops at prisons
(COLUMBIA, S.C.) – Attorney General Alan Wilson has joined a multistate effort to combat the alarming rise in drones that are illegally dropping contraband into prisons, including narcotics, weapons, cell phones, and other items.
Per federal law, only a narrow set of federal agencies are authorized to detect, track, and mitigate unauthorized drones. Meaning, correctional officials – who are on the front lines of this issue – often lack the legal authority and the necessary tools to intervene in real time. To address this gap, Attorney General Wilson and 20 other Attorneys General are asking the Trump administration to provide state and local law enforcement with the ability to disable or intercept drones before they reach the prison.
“I've continued to advocate for ways to keep illegal contraband out of our prisons,” Attorney General Wilson stated. “The public safety threat caused by these drone drops is one that our local and state authorities have no jurisdiction over. This needs to change so we can keep our facilities and communities safe.”
As stated in the letter: “This type of illegal activity is happening all over the country, and the consequences are severe. The introduction of drugs contributes to addiction, violence, and overdose incidents. Smuggled weapons heighten the risk of assaults and coordinated acts of violence. Contraband cell phones enable incarcerated individuals to continue criminal enterprises, including fraud schemes, witness intimidation, and violent crime.”
For this reason, the Attorneys General request that the Task Force, led by Dr. Gorka, work with federal agencies to grant carefully defined authority for state and local law enforcement to address this threat quickly and efficiently. They also recommend continued collaboration with federal partners to investigate and prosecute those who use drones to introduce contraband into correctional facilities.
In addition to Attorney General Wilson, the attorneys general of the following states have also signed on to this Georgia-led letter: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and West Virginia.
Find a copy of the letter here.
Media Contact
For media inquiries please contact Robert Kittle, [email protected] or 803-734-3670
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