Micro-aircraft declared safe to fly in U.S. skies.

* One of the first hand-launched unmanned aerial vehicles fielded in Iraq is now being offered to local law enforcement and government agencies after it received approval from the Federal Aviation Administration to fly in domestic airspace.

The Nighthawk IV micro UAS is the fourth iteration of the aircraft that was first flown in Iraq in 2003. Hundreds made it to war zones, where soldiers could launch the two-pound aircraft with the flick of the wrist. The Raven, manufactured by Aero-Vironment, eventually supplanted them on the battlefield.

The Nighthawk's maker, Albuquerque, N.M.-based Advanced Research Associates Inc., recently obtained a certificate of authorization (COA) from the FAA, which certifies that it is airworthy, said Bob Quinn, the company's unmanned security systems division manager.

ARA is better known for research and development projects for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Air Force Research Laboratory and the Defense Threat Reduction Agency. The company is now moving toward selling products as well, Quinn said.

The COA means that the firm can sell the Nighthawk to local law enforcement, and federal agencies as well as universities. These entities must also apply for a certificate to let the FAA know where they intend to fly the aircraft. But with the documentation in hand, that process should take less than 60 days, Quinn said.

Receiving the COA for the aircraft itself was no easy task, Quinn said. The agency still has not released new rules for small and micro-sized remotely piloted aircraft.

"Our small aircraft was treated just like a 747," he said.

For example, the Nighthawk had to get a waiver so it wasn't required to carry its flight...

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