Peter Akemann – co -founder of Call of Duty’s Treyarch and recent president of The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners Studio Skydance Interactive – pleaded guilty to unmanned aircraft into a fire -fighting aircraft to support the recent La forest fire. The accident, based on the plane by damaging its left wing, happened after Akemann ignored the limitations of unmanned aircraft temporarily to investigate Palisades fires before losing control. Thanks, Eurogamer. To realize for the first time, I mean. I did not blame Eurogamer for the drone. Not this, anyway.
The drone was traced from Akemann, who agreed to plead guilty to some unsafe operations of a drone. It was a misconduct that often carried a year in prison, but he “hoped to escape the prison sentence in exchange for 150 hours to serve the community to support forest fire relief and about 65,000 USD cost to repair aircraft”, write Eurogamer, as part of the defense agreement.
The defendant recklessly flew a aircraft into the airspace, where the first reactions were risking their lives in an effort to protect their lives and property, he said US lawyer Joseph T. Mcnally in a statement. This damage caused to the Super Scooper is a clear reminder that unmanned aircraft during emergency causes extreme threat to employees trying to help people and compromise the police and fire to conduct activities.
This is a way to declare the problem:
Akemann flew at least 2,500 meters (more than 1.5 miles) towards the fire and lost the vision of unmanned aircraft. When Akemann was flying unmanned aircraft, it collided with a Super Super Scooper government carrying two crews trying to fight the fire. The impact causes a hole about 3 inches x 6 inches on the left wing. After landing, maintenance staff identify damage and take the aircraft out of the service for repair.
Akemann’s defense lawyers said he was “deeply sorry” for the incident in a separate statement, despite making “some mitigating factors”, writing Eurogamer “, including the failure of a geographic fence protection feature on Akemann’s DJI drone”.
Humble Bundle (owned by parent company RPS Ziff Davis) is currently providing a collection of packages to assist those affected by La fire. Call of Duty Activision recently donated $ 1 million to La Fire, along with the money collected from the skin ‘La Fire relief’ for Black Ops 6 and Warzone. Necrosoft’s Brandon Sheffield has recently combined a bunch of Itch.io to help those affected with direct financial support.