超级碗球迷被警告:禁止携带无人机前往 赛场禁飞令生效


2026年2月6日 / 美国东部时间下午5:35 / CBS新闻

随着全国球迷齐聚加利福尼亚州,观看周日超级碗比赛中新英格兰爱国者队对阵西雅图海鹰队,警方提醒球迷将无人机留在家中。

今年超级碗举办地圣克拉拉市警察局长表示,当局已做好必要时击落无人机的准备。

无人机(Unmanned Aerial Vehicles)在网上极易购买,越来越受业余无人机飞行员欢迎,其中包括希望拍摄喜爱赛事的体育迷。

但无人机带来的风险真实存在:无论是业余爱好者的无人机发生故障坠入看台,还是不法分子利用无人机向体育场内投送物品。

总部位于华盛顿特区的科技公司ENESCO从事反无人机训练的退役陆军上校比尔·爱德华兹预计,有人会试图在超级碗现场放飞无人机。

“我们必须预料到国内每次重大活动都会出现这种情况,”爱德华兹在采访中表示。

![Levi’s Stadium内场50码线视角(2026年2月4日,加利福尼亚州圣克拉拉市超级碗LX赛前拍摄)】Don Juan Moore/Getty Images

为应对这一问题,美国联邦航空管理局(FAA)已颁布超级碗期间禁飞令。联邦政府将超级碗列为需跨部门广泛支持的顶级特殊活动。

FAA表示,正与联邦调查局(FBI)合作,监测、追踪并评估未经授权的无人机活动。未经许可在禁飞空域操作无人机的人员将面临最高75,000美元罚款、无人机没收及联邦刑事指控。

负责超级碗安保的执法机构采用多层应对措施:

“从地面拦截小组联系地面飞行员进行引导,到迫降或根据情况击落无人机,我们有多种应对手段,”圣克拉拉警察局长科里·摩根表示。

俄乌战争和中东冲突中海外无人机技术的进步,给执法部门带来新挑战。

曾为纽约警察局等部门提供无人机威胁应对培训的爱德华兹特别指出,光纤驱动的无人机可避开雷达检测,“这将20年后的技术能力提前到现在实现,”他强调,“威胁等级已提升百倍。”

Super Bowl fans warned to keep drones at home with flights banned over big game

February 6, 2026 / 5:35 PM EST / CBS News

As fans from around the country descend on California to watch the New England Patriots take on the Seattle Seahawks in Sunday’s Super Bowl, officials are telling them to leave their drones at home.

The police chief in Santa Clara, where this year’s big game will be played, said authorities are prepared to shoot down a drone, if necessary.

Unmanned aerial vehicles, commonly known as drones, can be easily purchased online and are increasingly popular with hobbyist drone pilots, including sports fans who want to film their favorite events.

But the risks posed by drones are real, whether a hobbyist drone malfunctions and falls into the stands or a bad actor uses a drone to drop something into the stadium.

Retired Army Col. Bill Edwards, who runs counter-drone training at Washington, D.C.-based tech company ENSCO, expects people will try to fly drones at the big game.

“We have to expect it at every major event that’s happening in the country,” Edwards said in an interview.

The view from the 50-yard line is seen inside Levi’s Stadium ahead of Super Bowl LX on Feb. 4, 2026, in Santa Clara, California. Don Juan Moore/Getty Images

To get ahead of the issue, the Federal Aviation Administration has issued a ban on all drone flights over the Super Bowl, which has been classified by the federal government as a top special event that merits extensive interagency support.

The FAA says it is collaborating with the FBI to detect, track and assess unauthorized drone activity, and drone operators who fly them in restricted airspace without authorization face fines of up to $75,000, confiscation of their drone and federal criminal charges.

Law enforcement agencies working on Super Bowl security use layers of responses and mitigation efforts for drones.

“Everything from ground intercept teams to contact the pilot on the ground to redirecting it, landing it or even shooting it down depending on the circumstances,” Santa Clara Police Chief Cory Morgan said.

Technological advancements to drones made overseas during the Russia-Ukraine war and conflicts in the Middle East pose new challenges to law enforcement.

Edwards, who trains such police departments as the New York Police Department on drone threat mitigation, points to fiber-optic drones that can evade detection by radar systems as a particular concern.

“It’s promulgating the technology’s capability 20 years into the future — now,” he said. He also said, “The threat level has increased a hundredfold.”

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