Clip4
Touchdown! Greaser!
When I become too old to fly, I going to call the FAA hotline and report myself every time I think about flying.
and I have first-hand information that I believe is directly relevant
The irony imo is that the faa will take a complaint anonymously just as seriously as any other.It’s supposedly a right of all free people to confront their accusers.
Imagine you’re tempted to call the FAA and rat out a neighbor. Now imagine yourself being deposed or worse yet examined in court, explaining what the accused did and how you came to know about it. It’s one thing if you saw him beating a puppy. It’s another if you saw him install an airplane part. “Everyone knows he ignores the rules, and I saw him replace an alternator, and he isn’t an A&P — at least not as far as I know. . .” Are you ready to be that guy, whining, “it’s against the rooowuhls!”? Probably not, but you might rat anonymously.
Anonymous accusations are cowardly, and a detriment to every system in which they’re respected. When the FAA calls, they shouldn’t be able to get away with “we’ve received a complaint. . .” They should have to say, “Joe Blogs called the FSDO and reported. . . .”
If you personally see someone doing something that you think ought not to be done, your options are generally two: 1) talk to him personally or 2) forget about it. In real life, there are other options like talking to a mutual friend, talking to his wife, etc., etc. Of course, there are times when going to the authorities is the only safe and ethical option. There are even times when a witness must be anonymous, but this thread isn’t about reporting organized crime or doomsday cults.
OneCharlieTango,
who isn’t blind to the irony of posting under a pseudonym.
Notice that I didn't actually say they take them seriously.A lot of folks here seen to have had very different experiences with FAA investigations than I have. I reported a CFI, with a student on board, who violated several regulations in a deliberate attempt to frighten me and several others for a perceived slight. He also demonstrated, on a frequency recorded by LiveATC, contempt for the FARs he was violating. Several pilots reported this to the FAA. The CFI denied it and the FAA closed the file.
The irony imo is that the faa will take a complaint anonymously just as seriously as any other.
I hope the call from the FAA at least will give the CFI pause about doing something like that in the future.A lot of folks here seen to have had very different experiences with FAA investigations than I have. I reported a CFI, with a student on board, who violated several regulations in a deliberate attempt to frighten me and several others for a perceived slight. He also demonstrated, on a frequency recorded by LiveATC, contempt for the FARs he was violating. Several pilots reported this to the FAA. The CFI denied it and the FAA closed the file.
He hasn't been seen in the neighborhood since. So at least there's that.I hope the call from the FAA at least will give the CFI pause about doing something like that in the future.
By law, or by FAA rule? What law mandates that every “public safety” bureaucracy has to investigate every complaint leveled anonymously against any citizen?The FAA oversees public safety, so by law they are required to investigate all complaints.
By law, or by FAA rule? What law mandates that every “public safety” bureaucracy has to investigate every complaint leveled anonymously against any citizen?
The “so” here indicates that the FAA is required to investigate all complaints because they oversee public safety. It follows that every agency tasked with public safety is required to investigate all complaints. I didn’t insert that.The FAA oversees public safety, so by law they are required to investigate all complaints.
The “so” here indicates that the FAA is required to investigate all complaints because they oversee public safety. It follows that every agency tasked with public safety is required to investigate all complaints. I didn’t insert that.
I’m not going to dig through 49 USC, etc. What does it say?
And my point is that almost every anonymous complaint should be ignored because every anonymous complaint violates the rights of the accused.
And my point is that almost every anonymous complaint should be ignored because every anonymous complaint violates the rights of the accused.
And my point is that almost every anonymous complaint should be ignored because every anonymous complaint violates the rights of the accused.
Which rights are those?And my point is that almost every anonymous complaint should be ignored because every anonymous complaint violates the rights of the accused.
Case in point: The FAA recieves an anonymous complaint of pilot safety. The FAA looks at the complaint, throws in the trash because that inspector sees no merit in the complaint.
The next day your family boards an airplane with this pilot, and during the flight the pilot does the same thing that the anonymous complaint detailed, crashes and kills your family in the process.
I'm sure you will be relieved to know that the pilot that just killed your family didn't "have his rights violated". .
As I said above, the right to confront one’s accusers. It dates back to the Romans, at least.Which rights are those?
As I said above, the right to confront one’s accusers. It dates back to the Romans, at least.
An anonymous complaint is a “tip” that there is wrong doing. The FAA investigates that tip, and if they find it factual through evidence, they are the “accusers”.No, I’ll be angry that the one who complained was too cowardly to stake his name on it, even though the thing was apparently dangerous enough to cause a crash.
As I said above, the right to confront one’s accusers. It dates back to the Romans, at least.
The sixth amendment protects your right to confront the witnesses against you in a criminal prosecution. An investigation is not a prosecution, and an anonymous tipper will not be a witness against you, he's just what gets the investigation started.As I said above, the right to confront one’s accusers. It dates back to the Romans, at least.
Well, that’s an interesting point. If the only evidence is eyewitness testimony, though, the witness shouldn’t be allowed to hide behind anonymity.
I do see the point about tips, which are essentially witnesses pointing to external evidence.
Don't count on that.I think we can agree that’s bad.
Why? Hearsay evidence is admissible under all sorts of rules.I think we can agree that’s bad.
Why? Hearsay evidence is admissible under all sorts of rules.
And my point is that almost every anonymous complaint should be ignored because every anonymous complaint violates the rights of the accused.
"In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right...to be confronted with the witnesses against him...."
I'm not sure whether the rights of the accused in an FAA enforcement action are the same as in a criminal prosecution, but I would think that the "witnesses" would be any non-anonymous people that the investigation turned up. I would be very surprised if an anonymous complaint by itself would be sufficient to sustain the enforcement action.
So I guess you think Crime Stopper and whistleblower programs violate rights as well? And they get paid for their anonymous tips. Imagine if the FAA paid the same rate for tips....And my point is that almost every anonymous complaint should be ignored because every anonymous complaint violates the rights of the accused.
Agreed, and in both of those, a properly-conducted investigation is not by itself a violation of rights.An FAA enforcement is an administrative action, not a criminal prosecution.
The right to confront one's accusers, if it gets to a hearing. But if someone anonymously accuses a pilot of doing something, and a cursory investigation reveals it's likely true, the tipster is out of it. Many crimes are solved with anonymous tips.No, I’ll be angry that the one who complained was too cowardly to stake his name on it, even though the thing was apparently dangerous enough to cause a crash.
As I said above, the right to confront one’s accusers. It dates back to the Romans, at least.