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Drones: Industry & Defence
10MAY

DroneShield adds admiral as probe stays

2 min read
14:35UTC

DroneShield appointed retired Rear Admiral Lee Goddard as an independent director from 1 July, its second board move since its founder-CEO left in April.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

DroneShield added an admiral to its board as the ASIC probe into its 2025 disclosures stays open.

DroneShield appointed retired Rear Admiral Lee Goddard as an independent non-executive director (INED) with effect from 1 July, its second board move since founding chief executive Oleg Vornik walked out in April 1. DroneShield (ASX: DRO) is an Australian counter-drone company whose detection and jamming kit is used across Europe, North America and the Middle East. Goddard brings government acquisition and allied-cooperation experience across Australia and the US.

Hamish McLennan took the chair at the May annual meeting , and Goddard now joins him, a board deliberately professionalising after a founder-led decade. The appointment reads as the institutional answer to the question Red Cat's revolt poses.

The overhang has not cleared: the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) probe into DroneShield's November 2025 announcements and share sales remains open , and the first-strike vote against its own pay report stays on the record . An admiral on the board steadies the story; it does not close the file.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

DroneShield is an Australian company that makes equipment to detect and jam enemy drones. Its founding chief executive, Oleg Vornik, left suddenly in April, and a new chairman, Hamish McLennan, took over in May. On 1 July, DroneShield brought in Lee Goddard, a retired senior officer in Australia's navy, as an independent non-executive director (INED), meaning he is not an employee and is meant to provide outside oversight. This is the company's second board change since Vornik left. Meanwhile, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), the country's corporate regulator, is still investigating DroneShield's disclosures and share sales from November 2025, and that inquiry remains open.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

DroneShield's board lacked the majority-independent structure the ASX Corporate Governance Council recommends for a company of its size until Hamish McLennan's arrival as chair in May; Vornik and James's joint April exit removed the two directors, founding chief executive and founding chairman, through whom the company's decade of institutional and government relationships had run, leaving no independent director with government-procurement experience.

Goddard's specific naval and allied-acquisition background targets that narrower gap directly, beyond adding a board seat for governance optics.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    Goddard's naval and allied-procurement background targets DroneShield's specific institutional-relationship gap left by Vornik's exit, rather than functioning only as a generic governance-optics hire.

First Reported In

Update #14 · UK's £5bn drone bet follows Healey's exit

Simply Wall St· 5 Jul 2026
Read original
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DroneShield appointed retired Rear Admiral Lee Goddard as an independent director from 1 July, its second board move since founder Oleg Vornik's April exit. The ASIC probe into November's disclosures and share sales stays open, so the admiral steadies the story without closing the file.