gismo
Touchdown! Greaser!
A private pilot friend of mine sent me an email detaling a flight he took carrying a passenger who "won" the flight in an auction for a well known charity. Unfortunately his airplane is a (very nice) homebuilt. In addition one of the pictures in the email was clearly taken in flight from a nearby airplane making it a formation flight IMO. I also doubt that he gave the required notice to the FSDO for the flight. There may also be a drug test required which I don't think happened.
Basically he was completly unaware of the FAR's regarding this type of flight and thus several sections of 61.113d were clearly violated. I immediately replied with the bad news and suggested that it would be a really good idea to submit an ASRS form if the event was less than 10 days ago. Unfortunately it was eleven, but he's going to send one in anyway in the hopes that it might indicate some level of contrition on his part.
One thing I was wondering is whether the 10 day clock always starts when the violating flight occurs, or if it begins when the pilot becomes aware that a violation has occurred. If the latter I'd think he has 10 days from when he received my email reply since he was blissfully unaware of any violation before then.
I also suggested he might want to retrieve the emails containing the photographic "evidence" of his inadvertent misdeed, and that this might be a really good time to sign up for AOPA's legal defense program (and talk to an aviation attorney).
I sure would hate to see him penalized for this oversight, given that he's generally a very safety conscious pilot with a strong tendency to obey the rules conservatively.
Any other advice for this pilot?
I'm also wondering what those of you who follow enforcement procedures think the chances are that he will get caught in some sort of enforcement action. There were no other issues with the flight (no deviations, incidents, accidents, etc) and the passenger was quite satisfied with it so no complaints from there are likely.
Basically he was completly unaware of the FAR's regarding this type of flight and thus several sections of 61.113d were clearly violated. I immediately replied with the bad news and suggested that it would be a really good idea to submit an ASRS form if the event was less than 10 days ago. Unfortunately it was eleven, but he's going to send one in anyway in the hopes that it might indicate some level of contrition on his part.
One thing I was wondering is whether the 10 day clock always starts when the violating flight occurs, or if it begins when the pilot becomes aware that a violation has occurred. If the latter I'd think he has 10 days from when he received my email reply since he was blissfully unaware of any violation before then.
I also suggested he might want to retrieve the emails containing the photographic "evidence" of his inadvertent misdeed, and that this might be a really good time to sign up for AOPA's legal defense program (and talk to an aviation attorney).
I sure would hate to see him penalized for this oversight, given that he's generally a very safety conscious pilot with a strong tendency to obey the rules conservatively.
Any other advice for this pilot?
I'm also wondering what those of you who follow enforcement procedures think the chances are that he will get caught in some sort of enforcement action. There were no other issues with the flight (no deviations, incidents, accidents, etc) and the passenger was quite satisfied with it so no complaints from there are likely.
Last edited: