Florida 2025 2025 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S1422 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 04/15/2025

                    The Florida Senate 
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT 
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.) 
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Rules 
 
BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422 
INTRODUCER:  Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice; Criminal Justice Committee 
and Senator Truenow 
SUBJECT:  Unmanned Aircraft or Unmanned Aircraft Systems 
DATE: April 15, 2025 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Cellon Stokes CJ Fav/CS 
2. Atchley Harkness ACJ  Fav/CS 
3. Cellon Yeatman RC Pre-meeting 
 
Please see Section IX. for Additional Information: 
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE - Substantial Changes 
 
I. Summary: 
CS/CS/SB 1422 amends three sections of law relating to drones. The bill amends 330.41, F.S., to 
increase the criminal penalties from a second degree misdemeanor
1
 to a third degree felony
2
 if a 
person knowingly or willfully:  
• Operates a drone over a critical infrastructure facility;  
• Allows a drone to make contact with a critical infrastructure facility; or  
• Allows a drone to come within a distance of a critical infrastructure facility that is close 
enough to interfere with the operations of or cause a disturbance to the facility. 
 
The bill adds a component to the definition of the term “communications facility” in 
s. 330.41(2)(a)10., F.S. to include “wired” communication facilities. The bill also permits a 
person to operate a drone over a critical infrastructure facility for a commercial purpose if the 
flight is authorized as required. 
 
The bill amends s. 330.411, F.S., to specify it is a third degree felony for a person to knowingly 
or willfully:  
• Possess or operate a weaponized drone;  
 
1
 A second degree misdemeanor is punishable by up to 60 days in the county jail and a $500 fine. ss. 775.02 and 775.083, 
F.S. 
2
 A third degree felony is punishable by up to 5 year imprisonment and a $5,000 fine. ss. 775.02 and 775.083, F.S. 
REVISED:   BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 2 
 
• Alter, manipulate, tamper with, or otherwise change an unmanned aircraft or unmanned 
aircraft system’s hardware or software for certain purposes; or 
• Possess or operate such an altered unmanned aircraft or unmanned aircraft system. 
 
A person who possesses or operates a drone that carries a weapon of mass destruction, or a hoax 
weapon of mass destruction, commits a first degree felony.
3
  
 
The bill creates a first degree misdemeanor if a person violates s. 934.50(3)(b), F.S., by using a 
drone equipped with an imaging device to record an image of the tenant of privately owned real 
property, with the intent to conduct surveillance of the individual or property in violation of such 
person's reasonable expectation of privacy. Additionally, the bill makes it a third degree felony if 
a person violates s. 934.50(3)(b), F.S., and intentionally distributes surveillance. 
 
The bill amends s. 934.50(3), F.S., to provide that a person who has a reasonable expectation of 
privacy on his or her private property may use reasonable force to prohibit a drone from 
conducting surveillance, if the drone is operating under 500 ft. over the property.  
 
Additionally, a law enforcement agency may use a drone to provide or maintain the public safety 
of a crowd of 50 people or more, and in furtherance of providing and maintaining the security of 
an elected official.  
 
The bill may have a positive insignificant impact on state prison beds (an increase of 10 or fewer 
beds). See Section V., Fiscal Impact Statement. 
 
The bill takes effect on October 1, 2025. 
II. Present Situation: 
A drone, also called Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) and Unmanned Aerial System (UAS), is 
defined in s. 934.50, F.S., as a powered, aerial vehicle that: 
• Does not carry a human operator; 
• Uses aerodynamic forces to provide vehicle lift;  
• Can fly autonomously or be piloted remotely;  
• Can be expendable or recoverable; and  
• Can carry a lethal or nonlethal payload.
4
 
 
Small drones are regulated by the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) and federal regulations such 
as in 14 CFR 107.51(b)(2) which contain the following operating limitations for small drones: 
• The minimum flight visibility, as observed from the location of the control station must be no 
less than 3 statute miles.  
• The minimum distance of the small unmanned aircraft from clouds must be no less than 500 
feet below the cloud and 2,000 feet horizontally from the cloud. 
• The groundspeed of the small unmanned aircraft may not exceed 87 knots (100 miles per 
hour). 
 
3
 A first degree felony is punishable by up to 30 years to life imprisonment and a $15,000 fine. ss. 775.02 and 775.083, F.S. 
4
 Section 934.50(2), F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 3 
 
• The altitude of the small unmanned aircraft cannot be higher than 400 feet above ground 
level, unless the small unmanned aircraft: 
o Is flown within a 400-foot radius of a structure; and 
o Does not fly higher than 400 feet above the structure's immediate uppermost limit.
5
 
 
The FAA has recently adopted a rule for drone operators relating to remote identification which 
is the capability of an unmanned aircraft in flight to provide certain identification, location, and 
performance information that people on the ground and other airspace users can receive.
6
 
 
The FAA expects this rule will result in several important benefits and enhancements to support 
safety and security in the airspace of the United States. Remote identification provides 
information that helps address existing challenges faced by the FAA, law enforcement entities, 
and national security agencies responsible for the safety and security of the airspace of the 
United States. As unmanned aircraft operations increase, so does the risk of unmanned aircraft 
being operated in close proximity to manned aircraft, or people and property on the ground, or in 
airspace unsuitable for these operations.  
 
Remote identification provides a means to identify these aircraft and locate the person who 
controls them (e.g., operators, pilots in command). It allows the FAA, law enforcement, and 
national security agencies to distinguish compliant airspace users from those potentially posing a 
safety or security risk. It permits the FAA and law enforcement to conduct oversight of persons 
operating UAS and to determine whether compliance actions, enforcement, educational, training, 
or other types of actions are needed to mitigate safety or security risks and foster increased 
compliance with regulations. Remote identification data also informs the public and users of the 
airspace of the United States of the local operations that are being conducted at any given 
moment.
7
 
 
Drones and Surveillance 
The Freedom from Unwanted Surveillance Act is found in s. 934.50, F.S. The Act provides 
citizens’ privacy from non-law enforcement and law enforcement drone information-seeking 
surveillance over private property.
8
  
 
Section 934.50, F.S., prohibits a state agency, political subdivision,
9
 or non-law enforcement 
person from using a drone equipped with an imaging device to record an image of the tenant of 
privately owned real property, with the intent to conduct surveillance of the individual or 
property in violation of such person's reasonable expectation of privacy without his or her 
written consent.
10
 For purposes of this section, surveillance means: 
 
5
 14 CFR Part 107, (last visited March 11, 2025). 
6
 Federal Register, Department of Transportation, Vol. 86, No. 10 (January 15, 2021), Rules and Regulations 4405 14 CFR 
Parts 1, 11, 47, 48, 89, 91, and 107. (last visited March 18, 2025).  
7
 Id. 
8
 Section 934.50(3)(a), F.S. 
9
  “Political subdivision” means a separate agency or unit of local government created or established by law and includes, but 
is not limited to, the following and the officers thereof: authority, board, branch, bureau, city, commission, consolidated 
government, county, department, district, institution, metropolitan government, municipality, office, officer, public 
corporation, town, or village. s.11.45, (1)(k) F.S. 
10
 Section 934.50(3)(b), F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 4 
 
• With respect to an owner, tenant, occupant, invitee, or licensee of privately owned real 
property, the observation of such persons with sufficient visual clarity to be able to obtain 
information about their identity, habits, conduct, movements, or whereabouts; or 
• With respect to privately owned real property, the observation of such property's physical 
improvements with sufficient visual clarity to be able to determine unique identifying 
features or its occupancy by one or more persons.
11
 
 
 Section 934.50(4)(a)-(q), F.S., provides exceptions for law enforcement, government agency, 
and commercial uses for drones.
12
 A few of these other authorized uses for drones in s. 934.50, 
F.S. include: 
• To counter a high risk of a terrorist attack;
13
  
• To provide a law enforcement agency with an aerial perspective of a crowd of 50 people or 
more under certain circumstances;
14
 
• For the assessment of damage due to a flood, wildfire, or any other natural disaster that is the 
subject of a state of emergency declared by the state or by a political subdivision, before the 
expiration of the emergency declaration;
15
 
• To capture images by or for an electric, water, or natural gas utility under certain 
circumstances;
16
and 
• By an employee of the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission or of the Florida Forest 
Service for the purposes of managing and eradicating invasive exotic plants or animals on 
public lands and suppressing and mitigating wildfire threats.
17
 
 
There are no criminal penalties associated with this section, however civil remedies are 
specifically provided in s. 934.50(5), F.S. Also, evidence obtained or collected in violation of 
this act is not admissible as evidence in a criminal prosecution in any court of law in this state.
18
 
 
Protecting Critical Infrastructure and Schools from Unwelcome Drone Encroachment 
The Unmanned Aircraft Systems Act defines an “unmanned aircraft system” as a drone and its 
associated elements, including communication links and the components used to control the 
drone which are required for the pilot in command to operate the drone safely and efficiently.
19
  
The focus of the act is the safety of critical infrastructure,
20
 protection of schools,
21
 drone 
delivery services,
22
 and drone ports.
23
  
 
“Critical infrastructure facility” is defined in s. 330.41(2)(a)1.-20, F.S., to include, in part:                                                                                                          
 
11
 Section 934.50(2)(e), F.S. 
12
 Section 934.50(4)(a), F.S. 
13
 Section 934.50(4)(a), F.S. 
14
 Section 934.50(4)(d), F.S. 
15
 Section 934.50(4)(g)1., F.S. 
16
 Section 934.50(4)(k), F.S. 
17
 Section 934.50(4)(p), F.S. 
18
 Section 934.50(6), F.S. 
19
 Section 330.41(2)(e), F.S.  
20
 Section 330.41(2)(a)1.-20., F.S. 
21
 Section 330.41(5), F.S. 
22
 Section 330.41(2)(c), F.S. 
23
 Section 330.41(2)(d), F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 5 
 
• A power generation or transmission facility, substation, switching station, or electrical 
control center; 
• Any portion of an aboveground oil or gas pipeline; 
• A state correctional institution as defined in s. 944.02, F.S., or a contractor-operated 
correctional facility authorized under ch. 957, F.S.; and 
• A county detention facility as defined in s. 951.23, F.S.
24
 
 
It is a second degree misdemeanor
25
 for a first offense and a first degree misdemeanor
26
 for a 
second offense if a person knowingly or willfully:  
• Operates a drone over a critical infrastructure facility; 
• Allows a drone to make contact with a critical infrastructure facility, including any person or 
object on the premises of or within the facility; or 
•  Allows a drone to come within a distance of a critical infrastructure facility that is close 
enough to interfere with the operations of or cause a disturbance to the facility.
27
 
 
Additionally, a person may not knowingly or willfully:  
• Operate a drone over a public or private school serving students in any grade from voluntary 
prekindergarten through grade 12; or 
• Allow a drone to make contact with a school, including any person or object on the premises 
of or within the school facility.
28
 
 
A person who commits either of the offenses listed above commits a misdemeanor of the second 
degree. A second or subsequent violation is a first degree misdemeanor offense. However, if a 
person commits either of the two offenses above and records video of the school, including any 
person or object on the premises of or within the school facility, it is a misdemeanor of the first 
degree, and a second or subsequent offense is a felony of the third degree.
29
 
 
Armed Drones 
Section 330.411, F.S. prohibits a person from possessing or operating an unmanned aircraft or 
unmanned aircraft system as defined in s. 330.41, F.S.,
30
 with an attached weapon, firearm, 
explosive, destructive device, or ammunition as defined in s. 790.001, F.S. The terms mean:  
•   “Ammunition” means an object consisting of a fixed metallic or nonmetallic hull or casing            
containing a primer; one or more projectiles, one or more bullets, or shot; and gunpowder.
31
 
•  “Destructive device” means any bomb, grenade, mine, rocket, missile, pipebomb, or similar 
device containing an explosive, incendiary, or poison gas and includes any frangible 
container filled with an explosive, incendiary, explosive gas, or expanding gas, which is 
 
24
 Section 330.41(4)(a), F.S. 
25
 A second degree misdemeanor is punishable by up to 60 days in the county jail and $500 fine. ss. 775.082 and 775.083, 
F.S. 
26
 A first degree misdemeanor is punishable by up to one year in the county jail and a $1,000 fine. ss. 775.082 and 775.083, 
F.S. 
27
 Section 330.41(a), F.S. 
28
 Section 330.41(5), F.S. 
29
 A third degree felony is punishable by up to five years imprisonment and a $5,000 fine. ss. 775.082 and 775.083, F.S. 
30
 Section 330.411, F.S. 
31
 Sections 790.001 (1), (6), (8), (9), and (20), F.S.    BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 6 
 
designed or so constructed as to explode by such filler and is capable of causing bodily harm 
or property damage; any combination of parts either designed or intended for use in 
converting any device into a destructive device and from which a destructive device may be 
readily assembled; any device declared a destructive device by the Bureau of Alcohol, 
Tobacco, and Firearms; any type of weapon which will, is designed to, or may readily be 
converted to expel a projectile by the action of any explosive and which has a barrel with a 
bore of one-half inch or more in diameter; and ammunition for such destructive devices, but 
not including shotgun shells or any other ammunition designed for use in a firearm other than 
a destructive device. “Destructive device” does not include: a device which is not designed, 
redesigned, used, or intended for use as a weapon; any device, although originally designed 
as a weapon, which is redesigned so that it may be used solely as a signaling, line-throwing, 
safety, or similar device; any shotgun other than a short-barreled shotgun; or any 
nonautomatic rifle (other than a short-barreled rifle) generally recognized or particularly 
suitable for use for the hunting of big game.
32
 
•  “Explosive” means any chemical compound or mixture that has the property of yielding 
readily to combustion or oxidation upon application of heat, flame, or shock, including but 
not limited to dynamite, nitroglycerin, trinitrotoluene, or ammonium nitrate when combined 
with other ingredients to form an explosive mixture, blasting caps, and detonators; but not 
including: shotgun shells, cartridges, or ammunition for firearms; fireworks as defined in s. 
791.01, F.S.; smokeless propellant powder or small arms ammunition primers, if possessed, 
purchased, sold, transported, or used in compliance with s. 552.241, F.S.; black powder in 
quantities not to exceed that authorized by ch. 552, F.S., or by any rules adopted by the 
Department of Financial Services, when used for, or intended to be used for, the manufacture 
of target and sporting ammunition or for use in muzzle-loading flint or percussion weapons.
33
 
• “Firearm” means any weapon (including a starter gun) which will, is designed to, or may 
readily be converted to expel a projectile by the action of an explosive; the frame or receiver 
of any such weapon; any firearm muffler or firearm silencer; any destructive device; or any 
machine gun. The term “firearm” does not include an antique firearm unless the antique 
firearm is used in the commission of a crime.
34
 
•  “Weapon” means any dirk, knife, metallic knuckles, slungshot, billie, tear gas gun, chemical 
weapon or device, or other deadly weapon except a firearm or a common pocketknife, plastic 
knife, or blunt-bladed table knife.
35
 
 
Section 330.411, F.S., contains no criminal penalties attached to a person’s prohibited possession 
of an armed drone. 
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
The bill amends the criminal penalties in s. 330.41(4), F.S., by increasing the second degree 
misdemeanor penalty to a third degree felony for a person to knowingly and willfully: 
• Operate a drone over a critical infrastructure facility; 
• Allow a drone to make contact with a critical infrastructure facility, including any person or 
object on the premises of or within the facility; or  
 
32
 Section 790.001(6), F.S. 
33
 Section 790.001(8), F.S. 
34
 Section 790.001(9), F.S. 
35
 Section 790.001(20), F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 7 
 
• Allow a drone to come within a distance of a critical infrastructure facility that is close 
enough to interfere with the operations of or cause a disturbance to the facility.
36
 
  
The bill adds a component to the definition of the term “communications facility” in 
s. 330.41(2)(a)10., F.S., to include “wired” communication facilities. The bill amends 
s. 330.41(4)(a)1., F.S., to provide that a person can operate a drone over a critical infrastructure 
facility if the operation is for a commercial purpose and is authorized by and in compliance with 
the FFA regulations. 
 
The bill amends s. 330.411(1), F.S., to incorporate the definitions of the terms “unmanned 
aircraft”
37
 and “unmanned aircraft system.”
38
  
 
The bill amends s. 330.411(2), F.S., to specify that it is a third degree felony when a person 
knowingly or willfully possesses or operates a drone with an attached firearm, explosive, 
destructive device, or ammunition as defined in s. 790.001, F.S. 
 
The bill creates two new third degree felony offenses in s. 330.411(3) F.S., applicable to the 
protection of critical infrastructure.
39
 The new felonies are related to the FFA remote 
identification requirements.  
 
A person is prohibited from knowingly or willfully altering, manipulating, tampering with, or 
otherwise changing an unmanned aircraft or unmanned aircraft system’s hardware or software to 
purposely frustrate any tool, system, or technology intended to satisfy the remote identification 
requirements established by the FAA, as they relate to any unmanned aircraft or unmanned 
aircraft system, in violation of s. 330.41(4)(a), F.S., unless authorized.
40
 
 
A person is also prohibited from knowingly or willfully possessing or operating such an altered, 
manipulated, tampered with, or otherwise changed to purposely frustrate any tool, system, or 
technology intended to satisfy the remote identification requirements established by the FAA, as 
they relate to any unmanned aircraft or unmanned aircraft system, and violating 
s. 330.41(4)(a), F.S., unless authorized.
41
  
 
Additionally, the bill provides that a person who, without lawful authority, possesses or operates 
an unmanned aircraft system carrying a weapon of mass destruction or a hoax weapon of mass 
destruction, as those terms are defined in s. 790.166(1), F.S., commits a first degree felony.  
 
 
36
 Section 330.41(4)(a)1.-3, F.S. 
37
 “Unmanned aircraft” has the same meaning as the term “drone” in s. 934.50, F.S. “Drone” means a powered aerial vehicle 
that: does not carry a human operator; uses aerodynamic forces to provide vehicle lift; can fly autonomously or be piloted 
remotely; can be expendable or recoverable; and can carry a lethal or nonlethal payload. s. 934.50(2)(a), F.S. 
38
 “Unmanned aircraft system” means a drone and its associated elements, including communication links and the 
components used to control the drone which are required for the pilot in command to operate the drone safely and efficiently. 
s. 330.41(2)(e), F.S. 
39
 Section 330.41(4), F.S. 
40
 The bill specifies that authority can come from the administrator of the FAA or the Secretary of Defense or their respective 
designees. 
41
 Id.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 8 
 
The bill amends s. 934.50(4)(d), F.S., providing that law enforcement is not prohibited from 
using a drone to provide or maintain the public safety of a crowd of 50 people or more. 
 
The bill also amends s. 934.50(4), F.S., to provide that a law enforcement agency may use a 
drone in furtherance of providing and maintaining the security of an elected official.
42
 
 
The bill creates a first degree misdemeanor if a person violates s. 934.50(3)(b), F.S., by using a 
drone equipped with an imaging device to record an image of the tenant of privately owned real 
property, with the intent to conduct surveillance of the individual or property in violation of such 
person's reasonable expectation of privacy. The bill also creates a third degree felony if a person 
violates s. 934.50(3)(b), F.S., and intentionally distributes the surveillance. 
 
Finally, the bill amends s. 934.50(3), F.S., to provide that a person who has a reasonable 
expectation of privacy on his or her private property may use reasonable force to prohibit a drone 
from conducting surveillance there, if the drone is operating under 500 ft. over the property.  
 
The bill takes effect on October 1, 2025. 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
The bill does not appear to require cities and counties to expend funds or limit their 
authority to raise revenue or receive state-shared revenues as specified by Article VII, 
s. 18, of the State Constitution. 
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
None. 
C. Trust Funds Restrictions: 
None. 
D. State Tax or Fee Increases: 
None. 
E. Other Constitutional Issues: 
None. 
 
42
 See Section 943.68, F.S., for a description of security or transportation provided by the Florida Department of Law 
Enforcement to the Governor and others.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 9 
 
V. Fiscal Impact Statement: 
A. Tax/Fee Issues: 
None. 
B. Private Sector Impact: 
None. 
C. Government Sector Impact: 
The Legislature’s Office of Economic and Demographic Research (EDR) and the 
Criminal Justice Impact Conference, which provides the final, official estimate of the 
prison bed impact, if any, of legislation, has provided a preliminary estimate that the bill 
may have a positive insignificant prison bed impact (an increase of 10 or fewer beds) on 
the Department of Corrections (DOC). The EDR provides the following additional 
information regarding its estimate: 
• Per the FDLE, there were no arrests, nor were there guilty/convicted charges or 
adjudication withheld charges under s. 330.41, F.S. or 330,411, F.S. Though it is not 
known what kind of offender pool exists under the other newly created felonies, the 
lack of misdemeanor offender data and the majority of the new felonies being Level 
1, third degree felonies indicate an insignificant impact on prison beds.  
• Per the DOC, in FY 23-24, the incarceration rate for a Level 1, third degree felony 
was 9.7 percent. The incarceration rate for a Level 7, 1
st
 degree felony was 68.4 
percent.
43
 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
The provision in s. 934.50, F.S., permitting a person who has a reasonable expectation of privacy 
on his or her private property to use reasonable force to prohibit a drone from conducting 
surveillance, if the drone is operating under 500 ft. over the property. This appears to conflict 
with a small drone’s altitude limitations. The altitude of the small unmanned aircraft cannot be 
higher than 400 feet above ground level.
44
 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
This bill substantially amends the following sections of the Florida Statutes: 330.41, 330.411 and 
934.50. 
 
43
 Office of Economic and Demographic Research, SB 1422 – Unmanned Aircraft and Unmanned Aircraft Systems, (on file 
with the Senate Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice). 
44
 14 CFR Part 107, (last visited March 11, 2025).  BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 10 
 
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Substantial Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
CS/CS by Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice on April 9, 
2025:  
The CS: 
• Incorporates the definitions of the terms “unmanned aircraft”
45
 and “unmanned 
aircraft system” in s. 330.411(1), F.S.  
• Reorganizes s. 330.411, F.S., without substantial changes.  
• Clarifies that the new third degree felony offenses in s. 330.411(3) F.S., are 
applicable to the protection of critical infrastructure. 
 
CS by Criminal Justice on March 18, 2025:  
The CS: 
• Adds a component  to the definition of the term “communications facility” in s. 
330.41(2)(a)10., F.S. to include “wired” communication facilities.  
• Permits a person to operate a drone over a critical infrastructure facility for a 
commercial purpose if the flight is authorized as required. 
• Specifies in s. 330.411, F.S., that it is a third degree felony for a person to knowingly 
or willfully possess or operate a weaponized drone. 
• Creates a third degree felony in s. 330.411, F.S., if a person knowingly or willfully 
tampers with or alters a drone in violation of s. 330.41(4)(a), F.S., to purposefully 
frustrate technology intended to satisfy the Federal Aviation Administration remote 
identification system;  
• Creates a third degree felony in s. 330.411, F.S., if a person possesses or operates 
such an altered unmanned aircraft or unmanned aircraft system in violation of s.  
330.41(4)(a), F.S.  
• Permits a person, in s. 934.50(3), who has a reasonable expectation of privacy on his 
or her private property may use reasonable force to prohibit a drone from conducting 
surveillance there, if the drone is operating under 500 ft. over the property. 
• Creates a first degree misdemeanor if a person violates s. 934.50(3)(b), F.S., by using 
a drone equipped with an imaging device with the intent to conduct surveillance of 
the individual or property in violation of such person's reasonable expectation of 
privacy.  
• Makes it a third degree felony if a person violates s. 934.50(3)(b), F.S., and 
intentionally distributes surveillance. 
 
45
 “Unmanned aircraft” has the same meaning as the term “drone” in s. 934.50, F.S. “Drone”, as defined in s. 934.50(2)(a), 
F.S., means a powered aerial vehicle that: does not carry a human operator; uses aerodynamic forces to provide vehicle lift; 
can fly autonomously or be piloted remotely; can be expendable or recoverable; and can carry a lethal or nonlethal payload.   BILL: CS/CS/SB 1422   	Page 11 
 
B. Amendments: 
None. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate.