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DroneShield Scores $1.8 Million Contract with DoD for Handheld Counter Drone Tech: DroneGun MKIII

DroneShield DroneGun handheld cUASDroneShield Receives $1.8M Contract from U.S. Department of Defense

DRONELIFE Staff Writer Ian M. Crosby

Anti-drone system solutions provider DroneShield has announced its receipt of an $1.8 million contract from the United States Department of Defense (DoD) for its DroneGun MKIII handheld counter-drone system.

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The order will be delivered later in the month, with payment to be received in full during the current quarter. This new contract comes after a prior down selection by the DoD’s Joint Counter-small Unmanned Aircraft Systems Office (JCO) for an assessment of the DroneGun MKIII.

“It’s an honor to provide our DoD customers with advanced cUAS solutions to help address complex security requirements,” said DroneShield’s Director of Business Development Tom Branstetter. “DroneShield is committed to delivering critical Force Protection technology that enables security personnel to rapidly respond to this growing threat,” Branstetter added.

“As the threat of UAS continues to seemingly adapt in real-time, countermeasures need to be both effective and flexible,” added DroneShield U.S. CEO Matt McCrann. “DroneGun MKIII is that lightweight, flexible countermeasure that can go anywhere and serve as the ideal gap fill capability to protect personnel and assets wherever they might need to operate. We look forward to continuing to support our DoD end users wherever, whenever needed.”

DroneShield’s largest sale in the US yet, this contract comes after the news of several other contracts by the company, such as the $2 million European sale of DroneSentry fixed site systems and the initial US airport deployment. DroneShield is additionally proceeding with active discussions on sales to Ukraine after the first deployment at the start of the war earlier in the year.

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Ian attended Dominican University of California, where he received a BA in English in 2019. With a lifelong passion for writing and storytelling and a keen interest in technology, he is now contributing to DroneLife as a staff writer.

 

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