Texas DPS Seizes Eight Drones in Houston World Cup No-Fly Zone; One Operator Faces Felony Charges
The Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) has seized eight drones within the FAA's Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR) around Houston's 2026 FIFA World Cup venues since the tournament began. One operator faces felony charges after flying to approximately 900 feet (274 m) above the restricted zone. The seizure tally already surpasses the seven drones intercepted during the entire 2024 Super Bowl week, and Texas DPS is the first state-level law enforcement agency to independently deploy drone counter-UAS hardware at a major sporting event.

Highlights
- Texas DPS seized eight drones inside the FAA TFR around Houston World Cup venues between the tournament's opening and June 16, 2026—the highest weekly seizure count ever publicly disclosed at a U.S. sporting event.
- One operator faces felony charges after DPS Air Ops tracked their drone to approximately 900 feet (274 m) above the restricted zone, more than double the FAA's 400-foot recreational and commercial ceiling.
- Houston's eight seizures in a single event week already surpass the seven drones intercepted by all agencies combined during the entire 2024 Super Bowl week in Las Vegas.
- Texas DPS is the first state-level law enforcement agency to independently deploy federal counter-UAS detection hardware—integrating ground-based RF/optical sensors with WESCAM MX-equipped helicopters—at a major sporting event.
- The active TFR covers a 3-nautical-mile radius around each venue from the surface to 3,000 feet; it cannot be pre-authorized via LAANC and applies to all drones regardless of size, certification, or flight purpose.
The Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) has announced that, since the opening of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, eight drones have been seized within the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR) established around Houston's World Cup venues.
According to KHOU, one operator now faces felony charges after DPS Air Operations (Air Ops) tracked their drone climbing to approximately 900 feet (274 metres) inside the restricted airspace. This also marks the first major sporting event in the United States at which a state police agency has independently deployed counter-UAS hardware directly around venues.
Image credit: Texas Department of Public Safety
The '900-Foot Incident' That Triggered Charges
The case began with a ground-level report. DPS ground units patrolling the perimeter of Houston's World Cup venues spotted a drone entering restricted airspace and immediately notified DPS Air Ops.
Image credit: Texas Department of Public Safety
Airborne crew tracked the drone as it climbed to approximately 900 feet, then used their aerial vantage point to guide ground officers to the operator's location, where the individual was apprehended on the spot. The operator may face federal charges under FAA airspace regulations; DPS has not released their name.
The altitude itself is legally significant. At 900 feet, the drone far exceeded the 400-foot (122-metre) ceiling applicable under FAA Part 107 commercial operations and recreational Section 44809 rules, placing it squarely in controlled airspace where prior FAA authorization is required for any UAS flight. The active TFR around the venue added a further layer of prohibition, banning all drone operations during the event window.
Eight Seizures in the Opening Week
The eight seizures cover Houston alone, from the tournament's opening through June 16—still the group-stage phase of the competition. That weekly seizure rate is the highest publicly disclosed by U.S. authorities for any single sporting event. Texas is hosting multiple World Cup matches, with Houston's NRG Stadium carrying the bulk of the state's schedule.
The previous record for venue-area drone seizures was set during the 2024 Super Bowl in Las Vegas, where federal and local agencies combined intercepted seven drones across the entire event week. Houston has now surpassed that figure in a single event week, at a single city.
The TFR Rules Operators Often Miss
The FAA imposes a Stadium TFR for qualifying venues during designated events. The restricted area extends three nautical miles (approximately 5.56 km) from the stadium's centre, from the surface up to 3,000 feet (914 metres), effective one hour before the scheduled start until one hour after the event concludes.
TFRs apply to all drones regardless of size, pilot certification status, or whether the flight is recreational or commercial. There is no Remote ID exemption within a TFR, and LAANC cannot be used to pre-authorize flights inside one.
The most common compliance failure is recreational pilots checking only the standard altitude ceiling while overlooking the TFR as an additional, independent restriction. The same airspace may be perfectly legal on a non-event day; once a TFR is active, any drone flight immediately constitutes a federal airspace violation.
DPS Chief Pilot Stacy Holland stated in a June 5 release: "Drone operators play an important role in maintaining safe airspace during large events." That role begins with knowing which rules apply.
Analysing the DPS Aerial Footage
Still frames released with the DPS announcement include on-screen display (OSD) overlays that reveal the equipment and geometry used in the interdiction. The patrol aircraft was recorded at 1,186 feet (361 metres) above ground level, with the gimbal depressed at a 44-degree angle, a slant range of 0.3 nautical miles to the target, and the subject standing in a parking area at a ground elevation of 43 feet (13 metres).
The aircraft coordinates embedded in the imagery—29.74779°N, 95.36021°W—place the helicopter over Houston's East End, approximately 4.5 miles (7.2 km) north of NRG Stadium and closer to Shell Energy Stadium and the EaDo venue cluster. This indicates the seizure took place at a peripheral venue within the World Cup TFR footprint, not at NRG itself.
The sensor characteristics in the overlaid footage are consistent with a WESCAM MX-series stabilised electro-optical turret, a line of long-range EO/IR sensors that Texas DPS has long operated aboard its Bell 407 and Airbus H125 helicopter fleet. The EOW label, auto-iris indicator, digital zoom readout, and "Downlink Low Latency" annotation all align with standard WESCAM operating conventions seen in U.S. law enforcement aviation.
The 1,186-foot patrol altitude is characteristic of rotary-wing operations rather than the fixed-wing surveillance profile of the Pilatus PC-12 or Cessna 208 aircraft also in the DPS inventory.
The Detection Hardware Behind the Seizures
As described by Texas DPS, the operation also served as a demonstration of hardware capability. DPS confirmed to Fox 26 Houston that new federal counter-UAS technology has been deployed at Texas World Cup venues to actively detect and intercept unauthorized aircraft entering restricted areas, though the agency declined to name the system supplier.
Federal counter-UAS detection hardware currently deployed at major U.S. venues typically integrates passive radio-frequency sensing, optical and thermal tracking, and direction-finding technology to locate operators on the ground.
KHOU's reporting noted that the Texas deployment is integrated with DPS Air Ops helicopters—which is precisely why airborne crew were able to track the drone to 900 feet and direct officers in real time to the controller's location.
Venue counter-UAS hardware has been authorized for certain federal partners under earlier expansions of the FAA reauthorization framework. State-level law enforcement agencies independently deploying this capability represent a newer development. Texas is among the first state agencies to operate this capability autonomously rather than relying on federal support.
DroneXL Perspective
Eight seizures in one week, a felony referral against one operator—this is what active enforcement looks like when detection hardware is placed in state police hands, backed by a rotary-wing platform carrying a WESCAM-grade EO turret.
The recreational drone community has had access to information about sporting-event TFRs through numerous public outreach channels for years. Information is not the missing piece. In Houston, what changed is that the cost of not checking the rules has become starkly visible—in court documents, in confiscated airframes, and in a time-stamped still image showing an operator standing at the open trunk of a parked vehicle while a DPS helicopter circles overhead at 1,186 feet.
The unresolved question is which specific charge the felony referral will ultimately land on. Federal aviation statutes allow civil fines reaching tens of thousands of dollars, with criminal prosecution possible when violations endanger public safety operations or manned aircraft.
DPS's use of the phrase "may face federal charges" rather than citing a specific statute is standard cautious language before the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Texas decides whether to prosecute. The first formal indictment out of that court will tell the recreational drone community precisely where the enforcement line has been drawn.
To state it plainly: every enforcement asset was in place at these venues—the only thing missing was common sense. Pilots know the FAA and other federal agencies are acutely sensitive around events of this scale, yet a handful still chose to ignore every warning and fly anyway.
The consequences are not imposed by chance; they are imposed by the federal government, and they almost invariably include drone confiscation and substantial fines. Ultimately, the choice belongs to the operator. Is one stadium photograph worth more than a clean record without a federal conviction?
Image credit: Texas Department of Public Safety
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