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![]() "gatt" wrote in message ... "Teacherjh" wrote in message Ok... suppose YOU were the FAA... and the incident occured exactly the way it was portrayed in the original post, and it was reported to the FAA (you). What would you (were you the FAA) do? Oooh. Me me me!!! : Assuming there wasn't some huge bureaucratic procedure, and I could just pick up the phone and begin an investigation, I'd let the pilot know she had been reported and ask her a few basic questions: What is her opinion of what happened, how current is her ticket, last flight review, logged hours, how often she flies, were there circumstances that caused her urgency, etc. Not adversarial, just an attempt to get an idea of the person who has been reported and the full details of the situation. That might, as a side effect, be enough to make her aware of her activity. If she balked or gave unsatisfactory information, I'd contact the owner of the aircraft and let that person know that his/her aircraft might potentially be involved in an FAA investigation, and why. Would have had to have gotten that information anyway to find out who was PIC of the reported aircraft, but I wouldn't rat out the pilot during that process. I -might- ask to review her logbook and then advise her of what she did wrong, the problems it might cause, etc. If the FAA never heard another report about her flying again, it shouldn't be a problem to anybody at all, but if further activity was reported the matter would have to be escalated. Would that be satisfactory? -c Any sane person would hang up on you within 10 microseconds. Hand over log books to a stranger playing pattern cop.....oh, sure. |
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