When Coast Guard Cutter STRATTON left its home port in Alameda, California, earlier this year, it was the first U.S. Coast Guard cutter to deploy fully equipped with a small unmanned aerial system (sUAS) for an entire patrol.
That sUAS was ScanEagle, and by the end of the deployment, the aircraft had directly assisted the STRATTON crew with conducting four interdictions, seizing more than 1,676 kilograms of illicit contraband valued at $55 million and apprehending ten suspected drug traffickers.
During the six-week deployment in the eastern Pacific Ocean, ScanEagle flew 39 sorties for a total of 279 hours, including one operation where the aircraft provided persistent surveillance for 22.7 flight hours in a 24-hour period.
ScanEagle was equipped with multiple sensors including electro-optic, thermal and telescope cameras that delivered a range of aerial imagery to the STRATTON crew and decision makers, enabling them to better execute real-time actionable intelligence.
The information ScanEagle provided will assist with prosecution efforts by the U.S. Department of Justice.
(Learn More about varied operations for the ScanEagle, courtesy of Daily Military Defense & Archive and YouTube)
“We are proud to celebrate the great success of this first deployment, and thank these brave men and women of the U.S. Coast Guard for the work they do to keep our nation and our global waters safe,” said Ryan M. Hartman, Insitu’s president and CEO.
The CGC STRATTON deployment is the first under Insitu’s June 2016 contract award to provide UAS ISR services aboard one Coast Guard national security cutter. Last month, the Coast Guard released a draft request for proposal to procure sUAS capabilities for its entire national security cutter fleet.
Insitu, a wholly owned subsidiary of The Boeing Company, is an industry-leading provider of information for superior decision making by creating and supporting unmanned systems and software technology that deliver end-to-end solutions for collecting, processing and disseminating information.
To date, Insitu systems have accumulated more than 975,000 flight hours and 120,000 sorties.