Prison Drone Drop Turns Into A Surf And Turf Smuggling Fail

Prison Drone Drop Turns Into A Surf And Turf Smuggling Fail | ADrones | 1 Photo credit: SCDC

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South Carolina corrections officers intercepted what might be the strangest holiday dinner delivery ever attempted, a drone-powered gourmet contraband drop that looked like someone tried to recreate a Food Network episode with the budget of a middle school bake sale, as FOX News reported.

The bundle included raw steak, bagged crab legs, Old Bay seasoning, a carton of Marlboros, marijuana, loose tobacco, and the sort of optimism usually found only in multi-level marketing pitches.

Prison Drone Drop Turns Into A Surf And Turf Smuggling Fail | ADrones | 2 Photo credit: SCDC

The South Carolina Department of Corrections posted the bust on X with the tag “ContrabandChristmas,” and to their credit, the photos do evoke a certain festive energy, assuming your idea of Christmas cheer involves raw meat traveling by aircraft into a maximum-security yard.

Whatever fantasy these inmates were about to live out, it ended the moment officers scooped the package off the ground.

They didn’t just recover the contraband; they also grabbed the aircraft responsible. Recent images released by SCDC show previous smuggling drones as well, including a very recognizable Autel EVO II and another oversized that looks suspiciously like an trying to hide its résumé.

Prison Drone Drop Turns Into A Surf And Turf Smuggling Fail | ADrones | 3 Photo credit: SCDC

If drones could talk, this one would probably say, “I was designed to spray crops, not deliver seafood to hardened felons,” but life takes strange turns.

Prison Drone Drop Turns Into A Surf And Turf Smuggling Fail | ADrones | 4 Photo credit: SCDC

Even SCDC admitted they’ve seen some odd contraband combinations over the years, but this one — a drone-delivered steak and crab boil kit — feels like a new chapter in “bad ideas that somehow made it past group discussion.”

Drone Smuggling Has Evolved Into a Full-Blown Logistics Department

Prison officials say they face “nightly attacks” from drones carrying drugs, electronics, and tobacco into facilities, and while “attack” might sound dramatic, it starts to make sense when you see the aircraft in action.

This isn’t some trembling entry-level pilot sending in a $300 drone with a pouch of rolling papers. This is smuggling as a service, complete with machines that can haul serious weight and fly long enough to make the trip worthwhile.

Prison Drone Drop Turns Into A Surf And Turf Smuggling Fail | ADrones | 5 Photo credit: SCDC

The Autel EVO II is already a lifting champion for its size, but that larger unidentified looks like it was ordered from a catalog titled “Things That Should Not Be Near Prison Fences.” It has the stance of an , the attitude of a farm machine, and the payload capacity of someone who said, “Let’s bring the whole cooler this time.”

Criminals have clearly upgraded their equipment, while prisons continue to play a never-ending game of Whac-A-Mole with technology they were not built to handle. And while this drop went viral purely because steak and crab legs are funnier than fentanyl, the majority of drone deliveries are far more dangerous.

South Carolina knows this well. In 2022, an eight-month investigation netted 20 arrests, 12 seized drones, and 100 pounds of contraband. Officers also found multiple abandoned drones in the woods, likely discarded after pilots panicked, lost signal, or realized they’d underestimated the weight of an entire seafood dinner.

And although this particular smuggling attempt was absurdly culinary, the trend behind it is anything but funny for corrections departments. Every year the drones get bigger, faster, and more capable, which means prisons without proper counter-drone measures are basically playing defense against flying pickup trucks.

DroneXL’s Take

The steak and crab legs will get all the attention, and frankly, they deserve it. But the real story here is the hardware. Anyone casually sending an Autel EVO II or a heavy-lift agricultural-style quad into a prison yard is operating at a level of boldness that deserves its own documentary.

These aren’t toys buzzing over a fence; they’re airborne haulers feeding a smuggling economy that’s evolving faster than prisons can adapt. If facilities don’t modernize their counter-drone tools, stories like this will go from ridiculous to routine, and the payloads won’t always be seafood and seasoning.

Photo credit: SCDC

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