Remember Those Mystery Drones Over New Jersey? A Private Contractor Just Revealed What Happened
In the summer of 2024, hundreds of unidentified drones appeared over New Jersey and stirred widespread alarm. Thousands of reports flooded local authorities as people spotted small craft near military bases and other critical infrastructure. The unusual swarm behavior pushed officials and residents to demand answers quickly.
A private contractor quietly claimed responsibility for the flights during August’s Army UAS and Launched Effects Summit at Fort Rucker, Alabama. An attendee later spoke about the admission to the NY Post, saying the company was demonstrating technology that had caused the scenes people witnessed. The revelation shifted the story from mystery to a government-contracted test gone public.
Watched the NJ drones fly around the Hudson River, near the Freedom tower, and over the W hotel in Hoboken last night. They were circling for a good 20-30 minutes. Crazy they can fly so close to our most valuable assets with full impunity. pic.twitter.com/PKhl7Ip6ki
— Dan Silverman (@Cryptodamus44) December 14, 2024
“You remember that big UFO scare in New Jersey last year? Well, that was us,” one company employee said at the summit. The firm reportedly demonstrated a 20 foot long drone to highlight its capabilities, and that demonstration is what likely sparked the wave of sightings. Officials say the craft’s size and movement made it stand out against typical hobby drones.
Because the contractor was operating under a government agreement, it was not obligated to notify the public before running those tests. That contractual protection meant the flights could occur without the same transparency expected for civilian airspace experiments. The lack of public notice left residents and local agencies scrambling to interpret what they were seeing.
“It feels like it’s a UFO because it defies what you’re expecting to see,” the source said. “When it turned, you almost completely [lost] sight of it,” they continued. Those firsthand impressions help explain why reports described sudden disappearances and baffling maneuvers.
Witness accounts emphasized how different the machine looked in the sky compared with standard recreational drones, which tend to have predictable lights and slower motion. Observers often reported a rapid change in angle or speed that made tracking the object difficult. That optical trickery made many assume the craft had vanished when it actually hadn’t.
Local law enforcement initially treated the influx of calls as a potential security issue because of the proximity to bases and infrastructure. Investigators worked to balance public concern with the need to determine whether the flights posed a real threat. As the contractor’s admission came to light, agencies began to reframe their response around testing protocols instead of a deliberate security breach.
Earlier this year, the Federal Aviation Administration, under President Trump, disclosed that the so-called “mystery drones” were not part of any covert operation but were simply flown by hobbyists and recreational pilots. That federal statement addressed a separate set of sightings and clarified that not all unusual drone reports indicate malicious intent. Still, the Fort Rucker disclosure showed a different slice of the problem: government-contracted systems operating without public notice.
The episode has raised fresh questions about how and when contractors run airspace tests near populated areas. Citizens want clearer notice when large, unfamiliar systems are tested overhead, and officials want a reliable way to distinguish routine tests from threats. Until rules around disclosure and coordination change, similar confusion could happen again.