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Belle wrote:
Hi all! Does anybody out there know the 14 yr old boy or his parents from Rainsville Ala who managed to get a small plane up into the air last night? I would really like to interview him or his parents. Please help if you can. Thanks for everything. Linda I haven't heard about this incident. Tell me more! Keith Mann |
#2
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Article published Jun 16, 2005
Alabama boy accused of taking stolen airplane on joy ride The Associated Press A 14-year-old boy allegedly found a key inside an unlocked plane and took the aircraft on a late-night joy ride, buzzing an Alabama town for nearly 30 minutes as he took off and landed twice. The youth suffered minor cuts and bruises Wednesday night in his second landing, which was rough, but authorities still took him to a juvenile lockup after charging him with theft of a Cessna 152 worth $35,000. Police said the boy, who wasn't identified because of his age, had no flying experience. He allegedly took his mother's van from their home in Rainsville and drove to the airport in Fort Payne, about five miles away. Police Chief David Walker said the teen told officers he unhooked the plane's tie-downs, started the engine and began "driving the plane around, and the next thing he knew he was in the air." He said the boy flew for about five minutes before landing on the runway and taking off again, flying for a longer period over several areas of town before returning to the airport. Walker said the plane apparently came in too hard during the boy's second landing, making him loose control. "The plane left the runway and the juvenile stated he gave it more throttle to try to get back in the air and avoid the fence," Walker said. The plane cleared the fence, but the engine died and it came down hard on a road beside the airport. The landing gear collapsed and the propeller dug into the road. Walker said officers were notified of the crash around 11:20 p.m. CDT. Instruments indicated the plane was in the air for 26 minutes in all, he said. Mayor Bill Jordan said the airport was secure except for one open gate. "It's a miracle the boy wasn't killed or someone else wasn't hurt or killed or that we didn't have significant property damage from the plane crashing somewhere else," Jordan told the Times-Journal of Fort Payne. The last thing you think about is a 14-year-old stealing a plane from the airport." Authorities said the incident raised questions about homeland security measures in Fort Payne, a textile town of 13,000 located about 80 miles northeast of Birmingham. The airport manager acknowledged the issue hadn't gotten much consideration in the past. "We've never had a problem before with planes being stolen, so I guess we have been a little lax in our security," said Larry Noble Cowart, who owns Valley Aviation, which runs the airport and owns the airplane that was taken late Wednesday. Cowart said the boy could have climbed a fence or simply entered through a gate that typically is left unlocked. "He could have just walked in. There's no evidence of forced entry. The plane was tied down with chains, but the planes aren't typically locked," said Cowart. The police chief said the boy found the ignition key on a clipboard in the plane. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
#3
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Belle,
First, there is no such thing as a "14-year-old pilot". The regs don't permit it. Authorities said the incident raised questions about homeland security measures in Fort Payne, Well, yeah, I'd expect "the authorities" to say something like that. It's still BS. "We've never had a problem before with planes being stolen, so I guess we have been a little lax in our security," said Larry Noble Cowart, who owns Valley Aviation, which runs the airport and owns the airplane that was taken late Wednesday. That guy, if quoted correctly, is a great help to GA in post-9/11-panic-mode times - not! Man, are GA people ever going to get it? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#4
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In article ,
Thomas Borchert wrote: That guy, if quoted correctly, is a great help to GA in post-9/11-panic-mode times - not! Man, are GA people ever going to get it? the better question is if the security people are ever going to grasp how little danger GA poses. -- Bob Noel no one likes an educated mule |
#5
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I thought only usenet posters didn't know the difference between lose and
loose. I guess The Associated Press doesn't either. "Belle" wrote in message ups.com... Article published Jun 16, 2005 Alabama boy accused of taking stolen airplane on joy ride The Associated Press Walker said the plane apparently came in too hard during the boy's second landing, making him loose control. |
#6
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Bob,
Man, are GA people ever going to get it? the better question is if the security people are ever going to grasp how little danger GA poses. No, that's EXACTLY the wrong question! That question is answered - and that's EXACTLY what people in GA need to understand, pronto. The answer is: Never! The problem is not in the facts (which are undeniably in favor of GA), it is in politics. Having GA as a scape goat and restricting it to give the appearance of decisive action against terrorism is excellent politics. It works with voters, and it works real well. There is hardly any way around that, short of a massive change of perception of GA in the public, which I simply don't see happening. Facts don't have anything to do with it. AOPA understood that real well after 9/11 and acted very smart with their airport watch program. This person in Alabama, OTOH, messed up big-time in that respect. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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Thomas Borchert wrote:
.... The problem is not in the facts (which are undeniably in favor of GA), it is in politics. Agreed. Politics has a way of magnifying minor details into major national concerns. It's like looking at a fly under a microscope and concluding that Godzilla will be invading the nation shortly. |
#8
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Bob Noel wrote:
the better question is if the security people are ever going to grasp how little danger GA poses. True, but the issue is not what is reality, but what the public perceives. If the general, non-flying public perceives GA to be a danger (incorrectly reinforced by silly comments made by unthinking FBO owners), they will pressure their congressmen/woman to push for even more restrictions over GA. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#9
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On Fri, 17 Jun 2005 13:35:32 +0200, Thomas Borchert
wrote in :: AOPA understood that real well after 9/11 and acted very smart with their airport watch program. This person in Alabama, OTOH, messed up big-time in that respect. Right. Leaving the keys in an unlocked aircraft creates an attractive nuisance that invites unauthorized use, and virtually creates criminal behavior. |
#10
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On Fri, 17 Jun 2005 09:25:32 +0200, Thomas Borchert
wrote in :: there is no such thing as a "14-year-old pilot". Personally, I'd characterize the lad as possessing superior piloting skills in light of his young age and absence of any flight training. |
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