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Chinese-Made DJI Mavic Drones May Be Taken off US Market Over Patent Infringement

White House Plans Strategic National Stockpile Revamp So ‘America Never Has to Shut Down Again’

The White House plans to replenish and redesign the nation’s strategic stockpile of critical supplies to make the country less vulnerable to future catastrophic events, three administration officials told reporters in a conference call Thursday. A key concept behind what is being billed as the Strategic National Stockpile 2.0 is to build up a 90-day buffer of key supplies and source more of the manufacturing in America, imbuing the system with “surge capacity” to make it possible to quickly ramp up production in the face of future cataclysmic events. Shortages of critical supplies like N95 masks and ventilators in the face of the outbreak of COVID-19, the disease caused by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus, has exposed the vulnerabilities of outsourcing key supply chains.…

Chinese-Made DJI Mavic Drones May Be Taken off US Market Over Patent Infringement

The popular Mavic series of drones made by Chinese manufacturer DJI may be yanked from the U.S. market as early as July after a ruling by the International Trade Commission (ITC) found the devices infringe on a patent held by an American firm.

DJI, the world’s largest maker of drones, infringed on a patent held by Autel, according to Steptoe, the law firm representing Autel before the trade commission. The chief administrative law judge of the ITC recommended that the infringing products—including Mavic Pro, Mavic Pro Platinum, Mavic 2 Pro, Mavic 2 Zoom, Mavic Air, and Spark—be banned from importation into the United States.

“If the chief administrative law judge’s determination is upheld by the full commission, these products could be taken off the U.S. market as early as July,” Autel’s law firm said in a statement.

Autel has also filed a petition to extend the import ban to other DJI devices, including the Phantom 4 and Inspire series drones.

DJI did not respond to a request for comment.

The ruling arrived amid increased scrutiny by federal law enforcement over theft of intellectual property (IP) by the Chinese communist regime. The Department of Justice’s China Initiative has significantly ramped up investigations into IP theft and related matters with cases open in every U.S. state.

DJI is also facing a congressional inquiry over allegations that its devices send data to China. A group of GOP lawmakers on the House Judiciary Committee sent letters to the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice on May 14 as part of the inquiry.

Chinese-Made DJI Mavic Drones May Be Taken off US Market Over Patent Infringement A DJI Mavic Zoom drone flies during a product launch event at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York City on Aug. 23, 2018. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

DJI drew attention from Congress after news reports emerged about its loan of 100 drones to state and local law enforcement agencies to help with enforcing social distancing guidelines amid the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) virus pandemic. As of March this year, nearly 1,100 state and local agencies had at least one DJI drone in their fleets, according to a study by Bard College, accounting for roughly 90 percent of all the drones in use by state and local authorities.

The Mavic series of drones are the most popular DJI devices. The company is the dominant player in the U.S. and global consumer drone market.

“This ruling is seminal and may be the basis for decisive legal action against other vanguard companies of the CCP worldwide economic influence campaign. This is where rollback of the CCP begins,” John Mills, former director of cybersecurity policy, strategy, and international affairs at the Pentagon, said in a statement to The Epoch Times.

A number of federal agencies have taken steps to warn against or outright ban the use of DJI drones.

The U.S. Army appears to have used DJI devices at least until August 2017, when the drones were banned “due to increased awareness of cyber vulnerabilities associated with DJI products,” according to a notice obtained by sUAS News. At the time, DJI drones were the most widely used off-the-shelf unmanned aerial device in the Army, the notice stated.

The Homeland Security Investigations office in Los Angeles went a step further in an unclassified bulletin (pdf) issued last year, stating “with high confidence” that “critical infrastructure and law enforcement entities using DJI systems are collecting sensitive intelligence that the Chinese government could use to conduct physical or cyber attacks against the United States and its population.”

The Department of Homeland Security released a similar notice in May 2019, warning that U.S. officials have “strong concerns about any technology product that takes American data into the territory of an authoritarian state that permits its intelligence services to have unfettered access to that data or otherwise abuses that access,” Reuters reported.

The Department of Interior (DOI) formally grounded its drone fleet early this year except for emergency missions. The department’s notice didn’t single out Chinese-made drones, although a spokesman told The Wall Street Journal three months earlier that the grounding was in response to national security concerns around Chinese-made drones. Prior to the grounding, the DOI had cleared DJI’s “government edition” drones in 2019 after an extensive study.

Focus News: Chinese-Made DJI Mavic Drones May Be Taken off US Market Over Patent Infringement

Missouri Moving Ahead With Execution Plans

O’FALLON, Mo.—Missouri is moving ahead with plans to execute a man next week, despite new concerns about key evidence that led to his conviction, and despite concerns about the CCP virus that prompted other states to postpone lethal injections. Walter Barton, 64, is scheduled to die by injection on May 19 for killing 81-year-old trailer park operator Gladys Kuehler in 1991. She was beaten, sexually assaulted, and stabbed more than 50 times in the town of Ozark, near Springfield. The execution would be the first in the United States since March 5. Three jurors involved in Barton’s 2006 trial now express misgivings, based on new blood spatter evidence, Barton’s attorney, Fred Duchardt Jr., said Wednesday. The NAACP and Missourians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty submitted more than 5,000 petition…