WASHINGTON – It came from the sky.
One moment, Eileen Peskoff was enjoying a hot dog after running with the bulls at a Petersburg, Va., racetrack. Then she was on her back, knocked down when a 4-foot drone filming the event in August lost control and dove into the grandstands.
"You sign up for something called running the bulls, you think the only thing you'll get hurt by is a 1,200-pound bull, not a drone," Peskoff said.
Drones flown for a business purpose, like the one that left Peskoff and two friends with bruises, are prohibited in the U.S. That hasn't stopped an invasion of flights far beyond the policing ability of the Federal Aviation Administration, which since 2007 hasn't permitted commercial drones in the U.S. while it labors to write rules to allow them.
Drones have nonetheless been used to film scenes in the Martin Scorsese-directed movie "The Wolf of Wall Street" and sporting events for ESPN.
They've inspected oil field equipment, mapped agricultural land and photographed homes and neighborhoods for real estate marketing.
Some deny they knew rules
All such flights in the U.S. are outside the rules. While the FAA hasn't ruled out granting commercial-use permits, it has so far allowed operations only in the Arctic.
Some operators plead ignorance of the rules. Some say their flying is legal under exemptions for hobbyists. Using drones is so lucrative for Hollywood that they're flown knowing they're illegal, said one operator.