HR-9229-119
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary, and in addition to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Jimmy Patronis (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would create a new federal crime — operating an unauthorized drone within 1,000 feet above a qualifying U.S. seaport. It would authorize the FAA and seaports to detect, seize, and disable unauthorized drones. Civil penalties of up to $25,000 per violation and criminal penalties of up to 2 years in prison (or up to 10 years if the violation involves intent to surveil, damage, or facilitate criminal or terrorist activity) would apply. The FAA would be required to issue implementing regulations within 180 days of enactment.
Who benefits
Seaport operators and their workers, who would gain a legal framework and enforcement tools against drone-based threats. Cargo shippers and supply chain businesses that depend on uninterrupted port operations. Cruise ship passengers and maritime workers whose physical safety could be at risk from drone attacks. Coastal communities near major ports. Federal and state law enforcement agencies, which would gain explicit statutory authority to operate drones at ports. The FAA, which would gain expanded regulatory jurisdiction.
Who is hurt
Commercial drone operators — including delivery companies, aerial photographers, surveyors, and inspection firms — who currently operate near ports and would need to obtain waivers or cease operations. Hobbyist drone pilots whose flight paths happen to pass over qualifying seaport airspace. Small businesses that use drones for port-adjacent services (e.g., infrastructure inspection, real estate photography). Drone industry manufacturers and service providers who may face reduced demand near port areas. Individuals who may face civil forfeiture of their aircraft for violations, raising due process concerns.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States' 300+ seaports handle 2.6 billion tons of cargo annually, making them high-value targets whose disruption could cause cascading economic and national security harm. They contend that existing federal law contains no specific prohibition on drone operations over seaports, leaving a critical gap that adversaries — including drug traffickers, smugglers, and terrorist actors — are already exploiting. The bill's tiered penalty structure, they argue, appropriately distinguishes between inadvertent violations and deliberate criminal or terrorist use, while carve-outs for government, law enforcement, and authorized commercial operators preserve legitimate uses.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's broad definition of "covered airspace" — up to 1,000 feet above ground level, with FAA authority to expand it further — could sweep in large swaths of urban and coastal airspace, effectively grounding legitimate commercial and hobbyist drone operations without adequate due process. They contend that civil asset forfeiture of drones without a criminal conviction raises Eighth Amendment proportionality concerns under Timbs v. Indiana (2019), and that the bill's vague "interference" standard in subsection (d) — which applies regardless of altitude — could expose operators to criminal liability for unintentional signal interference far from port boundaries.
Constitutional context
The bill's civil forfeiture and criminal penalty provisions implicate the Eighth Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause, which the Supreme Court incorporated against the states in Timbs v. Indiana (2019), requiring that forfeitures be proportionate to the offense. The Fourth Amendment may also be relevant if the bill's authorized detection and mitigation technologies involve surveillance of drone operators' movements or communications, which under Carpenter v. United States (2018) could require a warrant for comprehensive digital tracking.
Checks and balances
The executive branch (FAA and DHS) gains significant new authority to designate restricted airspace, issue waivers, and physically disable or seize private aircraft; checks include the bill's enumerated exemptions, the FAA's notice-and-comment rulemaking requirement, judicial review of forfeitures and criminal prosecutions, and congressional oversight of the implementing regulations.
Historical precedent
The FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 and subsequent rules established drone-free zones around airports and sensitive facilities, and Congress enacted similar restrictions over stadiums and critical infrastructure, providing a partial statutory model for this bill.