Skydio X10D Drones Stolen From Fort Campbell: Army CID Offers $5,000 Reward

Four Skydio X10D drone systems were stolen from a U.S. Army engineer battalion building at Fort Campbell in November 2025. Army CID went public with the case on March 9-10, releasing surveillance images and a $5,000 reward offer โ€” more than 16 weeks after the theft.

  • The Theft: Four Skydio X10D systems were taken from Building 6955, 326th Division Engineer Battalion, Fort Campbell, between November 21 and 24, 2025.
  • The Hardware: The X10D is a defense-grade drone priced at approximately $28,000 per unit, putting the total value of stolen hardware at over $110,000 โ€” not counting payload configurations that can push the per-unit cost significantly higher.
  • The Suspects: Surveillance video shows two individuals wearing dark sweatshirts, gloves, hats, and masks or balaclavas. Two vehicles are also pictured: a light-colored four-door sedan and a dark-colored four-door pickup truck.
  • The Reward: Army CID is offering up to $5,000 for information leading to arrest and conviction. Source: U.S. Army CID official reward notice.
  • The Tip Line: Call Army CID Fort Campbell at (931) 801-0316 or submit an anonymous tip at www.p3tips.com/armycid.

What Was Stolen and Why It Matters

The Skydio X10D is not a consumer drone. It is a defense-specific platform on the DoD’s Blue sUAS Cleared List, built for military intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance. Each unit carries a 48-megapixel telephoto camera capable of identifying a person from 2,400 feet and a vehicle from 6,500 feet. It integrates the Teledyne FLIR Boson+ thermal sensor, AI-driven obstacle avoidance, and a NightSense mode that allows fully autonomous flight in complete darkness. At approximately $28,000 per unit, four stolen systems represent more than $110,000 in military-grade hardware.

Army CID confirmed the serial numbers of all four stolen units in its official reward document. The drones were stored at Building 6955 on A Shau Valley Road when unknown individuals gained unauthorized access and removed them. Surveillance video captured two suspects and two vehicles. Army CID shared those images publicly on March 9-10, 2026 โ€” more than 16 weeks after the theft.

Skydio X10D Drones Stolen From Fort Campbell: Army Cid Offers $5,000 Reward
Investigators shared photos of two individuals who may be involved in the theft of four Skydio X10D drones from Fort Campbell in November 2025. Photo: U.S. Army Fort Campbell

A 16-Week Gap Before Going Public

The theft window runs November 21-24, 2025. Army CID published its reward notice on March 10. That is 16 weeks between the theft and a public appeal for tips.

Military investigations involving stolen equipment often move through internal channels before going public, and there may be legitimate operational reasons for the delay. But when the stolen hardware can fly autonomously in the dark, identify a person from nearly half a mile away, and operate in GPS-denied environments, the clock matters. If any of these units crossed a border or changed hands through secondary markets in the weeks immediately after the theft, that window is gone.

There is no public indication the drones have been recovered.

DroneXL’s Take

This story carries a hard irony. Skydio has spent years positioning itself as the secure, domestic alternative to DJI โ€” lobbying aggressively to remove Chinese drones from government contracts and state fleets. The pitch was always about security and supply chain integrity. The company’s lobbying history on this front is well documented. Now four of its flagship defense drones are unaccounted for after walking out of a U.S. Army storage building.

That is not Skydio’s fault. Physical security at an on-base storage building is an Army responsibility. But the theft exposes a gap that gets almost no policy attention: what happens to classified-capable hardware after it is delivered. Export controls and Blue sUAS vetting govern what goes into the drone and who can procure it. They do not govern what happens when two people in balaclavas walk into Building 6955 over a November weekend and leave with $110,000 in AI-powered surveillance hardware.

The $5,000 reward is modest relative to what these systems are worth โ€” and what they can do. My expectation: either an arrest comes within the next 60 days as the suspect images circulate regionally, or this goes quiet and moves into a counterintelligence track that never surfaces publicly. There will not be much in between.

If you have information, call Army CID at (931) 801-0316.

Editorial Note: AI tools were used to assist with research and archive retrieval for this article. All reporting, analysis, and editorial perspectives are by Haye Kesteloo.


Discover more from DroneXL.co

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Check out our Classic Line of T-Shirts, Polos, Hoodies and more in our new store today!

Ad DroneXL e-Store

MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD

Proposed legislation threatens your ability to use drones for fun, work, and safety. The Drone Advocacy Alliance is fighting to ensure your voice is heard in these critical policy discussions.Join us and tell your elected officials to protect your right to fly.

Drone Advocacy Alliance
TAKE ACTION NOW

Get your Part 107 Certificate

Pass the Part 107 test and take to the skies with the Pilot Institute. We have helped thousands of people become airplane and commercial drone pilots. Our courses are designed by industry experts to help you pass FAA tests and achieve your dreams.

pilot institute dronexl

Copyright ยฉ DroneXL.co 2026. All rights reserved. The content, images, and intellectual property on this website are protected by copyright law. Reproduction or distribution of any material without prior written permission from DroneXL.co is strictly prohibited. For permissions and inquiries, please contact us first. DroneXL.co is a proud partner of the Drone Advocacy Alliance. Be sure to check out DroneXL's sister site, EVXL.co, for all the latest news on electric vehicles.

FTC: DroneXL.co is an Amazon Associate and uses affiliate links that can generate income from qualifying purchases. We do not sell, share, rent out, or spam your email.

Follow us on Google News!
Haye Kesteloo
Haye Kesteloo

Haye Kesteloo is a leading drone industry expert and Editor in Chief of DroneXL.co and EVXL.co, where he covers drone technology, industry developments, and electric mobility trends. With over nine years of specialized coverage in unmanned aerial systems, his insights have been featured in The New York Times, The Financial Times, and cited by The Brookings Institute, Foreign Policy, Politico and others.

Before founding DroneXL.co, Kesteloo built his expertise at DroneDJ. He currently co-hosts the PiXL Drone Show on YouTube and podcast platforms, sharing industry insights with a global audience. His reporting has influenced policy discussions and been referenced in federal documents, establishing him as an authoritative voice in drone technology and regulation. He can be reached at haye @ dronexl.co or @hayekesteloo.

Articles: 5810

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.