Spidey wrote:Which can’t be modified?
We have two competing stories -- "it was hovering 10 feet up, scoping out my daughter" and "it was 200 feet up and had nothing to do with his daughter".
We have two pieces of evidence thus far -- the flight track data, and the actual damage to the craft. It's certainly possible that the flight track data was modified, and that they actually procured a second drone and damaged it. But not everyone is capable of hacking, and it'd be a fairly big job for someone who hadn't already planned to hack their data to dig through
DJI's proprietary software and create a false flight log in just a couple days -- and would probably leave behind forensic evidence (remember, we're probably not dealing with an organization with substantial resources; the drone pilot is a lone redneck.) And the drone itself doesn't look like it was shot at close range; even
birdshot would have left dents all over the skin.
It seems more likely to me, though not yet 100% proven, that the drone operators are telling the truth, and the guy who shot it modified his story to try to stay out of trouble. (A third, minor contributing factor to why I think the shooter is lying: he says he doesn't know if the drone was checking out his girls, looking for something to steal, or what. The camera on that drone is gimbal-mounted and has a big obvious directional lens. If it was hovering 10 feet up over the top of your yard, it'd be pretty obvious if the camera was pointed at your daughter. If it was 200 feet up, not so much.)