The New York Police Department detained photographer George Steinmetz last week and seized the $1,500 drone he had been using to document Hart Island, where the city has been burying unclaimed bodies of New Yorkers who died of COVID-19.

In New York City, it is illegal to launch or land aircraft, including drones, outside of designated airfields, but Steinmetz claims he took off from a sleepy parking lot on City Island in the Bronx and only flew half a mile over the water to Hart Island, avoiding LaGuardia’s airspace.

A representative of the NYPD told Artnet News that “drones are illegal to fly in New York City except for authorized areas. The areas approved for flying drones are very limited and set by the [Federal Aviation Authority].”

But Steinmetz believes the police’s concern “was not about public safety,” he told Artnet News. “It is clear to me that the the city was using this law as a pretext to stop people from photographing what was going on on Hart Island.”

Inmates from Rikers Island jail have been digging graves on Hart Island to bury the bodies of New Yorkers whose families could not be reached to claim them. As the death toll overwhelmed city morgues, many victims of the coronavirus have been sent to Hart Island for internment.

“It’s a mass grave,” said Steinmetz. “I think it’s very embarrassing for the De Blasio administration that they’re treating the city’s poor like toxic waste.”

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Preparing for burials of what appear to be more COVID-19 victims this morning on Hart Island, New York City. For over 150 years this island with no public access has been used to bury over a million souls who’s bodies were not claimed for private burial. With the morgues of NYC strained, the pace of burials on Hart Island has increased dramatically. I was cited by NYPD while taking this photo, and my drone was confiscated as evidence, for a court date tentatively scheduled for mid-August. #keepthememorycard

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An accomplished aerial photographer whose work often appears in National Geographic, Steinmetz previously photographed New York City from helicopters and rooftops for his 2015 book New York Air: The View From Above. With the publication of his latest book, The Human Planet: Earth at the Dawn of the Anthropocene, which came out earlier this month, he was inspired to take to the skies once again with an eye toward documenting the streets of New York during the unprecedented shutdown triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.

“I thought, wouldn’t it be interesting to look at the city in lock down, the city in paralysis from the air?” Steinmetz said. The results—slightly delayed because his regular helicopter pilot contracted coronavirus—offer a remarkable contrast to earlier photographs of bumper-to-bumper traffic and crowds in public spaces like Bryant Park.

<em>The Human Planet: Earth at the Dawn of the Anthropocene</em> by George Steinmetz. Published by Harry N. Abrams.

The Human Planet: Earth at the Dawn of the Anthropocene by George Steinmetz. Published by Harry N. Abrams.

“The avenues are empty, the bridges and tunnels are empty. It looks like a futuristic movie, like Planet of Apes or something,” said Steinmetz. “It’s like a dead city.”

Steinmetz reasoned that a quick drone outing at dawn, when internments take place on Hart Island, seemed harmless enough given that the island has more in common with a quiet New England fishing town than bustling Manhattan.

But about 15 minutes later, undercover police officers descended and confiscated his drone (though he removed the memory card first).

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Yesterday afternoon I took a helicopter flight over New York to take a look at a city in the depth of lockdown, a day when another 300 people died from COVID-19. Usually the skies of Manhattan are crowded with plane and helicopter traffic, but yesterday I had it all to myself. It was strange to see the glass canyons empty at rush hour, and most office buildings dark. Take a look up fifty blocks of First Ave. on far right. It felt like a scene from a futuristic apocalypse movie, waiting for a super hero. #pandemic

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Later that afternoon, Steinmetz approached again via helicopter, but air traffic control refused to give permission to approach Hart Island below 1,000 feet, even though he says he had seen a channel 11 news chopper hovering at about 300 feet that morning prior to his drone flight. “It seemed like word was out they didn’t want press,” Steinmetz said. “It was very odd.”

Jason Kersten, a spokesperson for the Department of Correction, which oversees the Hart Island and its operations, cited “a longstanding policy of not permitting photography of an active burial site from Hart Island,” telling Gothamist “it is disrespectful.”

Steinmetz received a summons to appear in court in 90 days from the incident.

The post This Aerial Photographer Captured Images of the Mass Burials on Hart Island. Then, the New York Police Department Confiscated His Drone appeared first on artnet News.