Plain English Breakdown
Checked against official source text during the last sync.
Unmanned Aircraft Over Correctional Facilities
This bill changes Tennessee law to make using an unmanned aircraft over a correctional facility a felony and allows correctional staff to disable such aircraft without liability.
What This Bill Does
- Changes the penalty for flying an unmanned aircraft over any portion of a property that includes a correctional facility from a misdemeanor to a Class C felony.
- Allows correctional facility employees to disable unmanned aircraft operating over properties with correctional facilities.
- Protects correctional facility and its staff from legal responsibility if they damage an unmanned aircraft while disabling it.
Who It Names or Affects
- People who use unmanned aircraft near correctional facilities
- Correctional facility employees
Terms To Know
- Unmanned Aircraft
- A flying device that does not have a human pilot on board, like a drone.
- Felony
- A serious crime that can lead to more than one year in prison.
Limits and Unknowns
- The bill only applies to unmanned aircraft over properties with correctional facilities.
- It does not specify what kind of disabling methods are allowed for the unmanned aircraft.