obxflygrl
Filing Flight Plan
What does it mean when the FAA Medical division sends your file to their legal counsel because you failed to provide the information requested after 3rd class medical was issued by the AME.
I guess I'm reluctant to get legal advice because my ame doesn't think I need it. I got my pilots license purely for the joy of it and haven't flown as PIC in several years but wanted to maintain the ability to get current when and if I wanted to start flying again.
I cannot understand why the process of getting a medical, or keeping a medical certificate is so damn difficult. It’s like the FAA wants to run around with their chest all puffed up trying to pick a fight with anyone who may have a crack in their armor. I will never understand why this process is so friggin cumbersome. Learning to fly the damn plane is by far the easier part of becoming a pilot!
If they haven't yet decided to revoke your medical certificate and you voluntarily surrender it for cancelation and if they accept it, then you'd still be eligible for basic med. This is the sort of thing an attorney would be able to advise you on.20/20 hindsight.
If they haven't yet decided to revoke your medical certificate and you voluntarily surrender it for cancelation and if they accept it, then you'd still be eligible for basic med. This is the sort of thing an attorney would be able to advise you on.
Which part aren't you sure of?I’m not sure that works. Do you know of anyone doing that?
No, that is not quite right. If they accept it, it gets contorted into a denial/ acknowledgment letter..that is why they won’t accept it......If they haven't yet decided to revoke your medical certificate and you voluntarily surrender it for cancelation and if they accept it, then you'd still be eligible for basic med. This is the sort of thing an attorney would be able to advise you on.
Don't make the assumption that "legal advice" automatically means doing battle. It means getting professional advice from someone who will know the right questions to ask you, maintain confidentiality, assess the degree you are at legal risk, and advise on a course of action to minimize it. Not a bunch of SGOTI who know and should know nothing about your specific situation.I guess I'm reluctant to get legal advice because my ame doesn't think I need it. I got my pilots license purely for the joy of it and haven't flown as PIC in several years but wanted to maintain the ability to get current when and if I wanted to start flying again.
I'm happy to be corrected if something I wrote is wrong. But as I said, this would only work if they haven't already decided to revoke the certificate and accept the surrender.No, that is not quite right. If they accept it, it gets contorted into a denial/ acknowledgment letter..that is why they won’t accept it......
once legal is involved the won’t accept it.
No, but the effects are largely the same.IS a revocation the same as a denial?
Might be talking a bit of semantics.I'm happy to be corrected if something I wrote is wrong. But as I said, this would only work if they haven't already decided to revoke the certificate and accept the surrender.
Seems we're in violent agreement. And what the OP needs is legal counsel to walk him through whatever options he might actually have.Might be talking a bit of semantics.
As a matter of policy, once the FAA decides you are not qualified to to hold the medical certificate, they will not accept a surrender and will pursue revocation (pretty much what you said, I think). It's still possible in certain circumstances to negotiate a "surrender" to avoid the formality and some (perceived or real) consequences of revocation, but the negotiated settlement will include agreement by the airman to treat it as a denial (what Bruce said).
Under those circumstances they won't accept it. From the FAA enforcement order:I’m not sure that works. Do you know of anyone doing that?