Cops blew £400k on Gatwick drone probe which caused Christmas travel chaos

Cops blew more than £400,000 on a shambolic probe into a drone alert which paralysed Gatwick.

Sussex Police is facing a backlash over the 36-hour airport lockdown. It led to the cancellation of about 1,000 flights and disrupted 140,000 people’s Christmas travel plans.

A senior police officer claimed there might never have been any drones over Gatwick, although the force later issued a “clarification” saying there were. One “sighting” proved to be lights on a crane.

Sussex Chief Constable Giles York admitted drones reported around Gatwick might have been police devices.

Documents seen by the Sunday Mirror show Sussex Police forked out £419,000 on the search, including £332,000 on overtime and extra bank holiday pay.

They also spent £52,000 to base
10 specialist officers on the site – reduced to four this month – and £12,000 on aid from neighbouring forces in Cambridge and Essex.

The rest of the bill was £5,000 on transport, £4,000 on search equipment and £14,000 on officers’ food and accommodation.

The MoD has yet to compile the final bill for the ­incident. Ten senior ­officials were deployed to manage the response.

The RAF reportedly used a £2.6million Drone Dome system which, using a radio frequency jammer, can crash devices in a six-mile radius.

A source said: “Given the shambolic handling of the investigation, it’s ­astonishing that the public have been left with a £400,000 bill.”

Police received 115 reports of ­sightings around the airfield, including 92 confirmed by Chief Constable York as coming from “credible people”.

The force launched its own drone to search for what officers believed at the time to be aircraft being flown above the runway maliciously.

Mr York made a grovelling apology to a couple wrongly arrested over the chaos, which began in the early hours of December 19.

He defended the decision to hold the arrested man for an extended period – despite his employer saying he was at work during the drone flights.

Airport bosses claimed it had lost at least £15million in revenue and airlines had lost more than £50million.

Sussex Police said: “Resource levels were reviewed throughout and stood down as soon as practicable.

"This figure reflects the cost of policing a deliberate criminal act of this nature.”

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