Brazil bets on technology to control Amazon. Every move was being watched from up in the sky, when the pilot of Colombian drug-smuggling plane landed at a clandestine air strip in the vast Amazon rain forest. The pilot got caught by a high –tech spy plane. A high-tech spy plane helps the police arrest a criminal with evidence and with no doubt. The Brazilian police arrested the pilot minutes later and confiscated 300 kg of cocaine. After this, Marcelo de Carvalho Lopes, head of the Amazon Protection System, or Sipam said, “We can't be everywhere, the region is huge. So we need intelligence to focus our resources," On the walls of one large conference room at Sipam's flying saucer-like headquarters in Brasilia, are the latest images of the areas worst affected by logging, taken with infrared cameras from Air Force planes. The images will be used as evidence in court against hundreds of illegal loggers. Currently, only 8 percent of all fines for illegal logging are collected, according to the environment ministry. The high-resolution images also show paths where loggers plan to chop trees, giving authorities a chance to prevent deforestation before it happens. By the end of the year, Brazil will have scanned 86 percent of the Amazon. With the high-resolution images it will gain an edge in law enforcement and conservation, analysts said. The problem is that the drug smuggling cocaine gangs enter from Colombia by boat instead of a plane to sell in Brazil or en route to markets in Europe.