One of Guthrie's friends, eh?Anthony said:The plane is registered to Vintage Aero Club, Smoketown, PA (S37 not LNS)
Ron Levy said:They ought to let a jury of pilots decide this guy's fate -- with the 8th Amendment suspended for the occasion.
At this point, there is just no excuse for any licensed pilot not knowing about this thing and blowing that far into it. While I have little sympathy for those who clip the ADIZ trying to skirt it too closely, I can understand how it happens. OTOH, I cannot imagine any possible explanation for how one could end up nearly in the center of the FRZ uninvited.
Ron Levy said:One of Guthrie's friends, eh?
Chuck, is our archive process working? This is a post I want to hold on to. However, I'd say Joe is not at risk here.Joe Williams said:If Hillary Clinton has the balls to uphold our honor, I'll vote for her for President.
Amen and amen.Joe Williams said:I am sick of our so called "leaders" belly crawling.
The plane was registered to Vintage Aero Club, a group of about 10 people who fly from Smoketown Airport in Pennsylvania's Lancaster County, said club member Merv King. He said he did not know who was flying it Wednesday but provided police a list of club members.
"It was not on our scheduled booking, so I have no clue," said King.
Joe Williams said:
ARRRRRRGGGGGHHHHH!!!! Maybe it just comes from formerly having a job that required me to stand my ground no matter what, but American leaders crawling and panicking like this is unspeakably disgusting to me. I swear, I will vote for whoever stands their ground next time, no matter who they are. If Hillary Clinton has the balls to uphold our honor, I'll vote for her for President. I am sick of our so called "leaders" belly crawling. Sure, there is about a million to one chance they'll get killed standing their ground, but at least they'll die like Americans instead of living yellow.
The plane belongs to Vintage Aero Club, a group of about 10 people who fly it out of Smoketown Airport in Lancaster County, said club member Merv King, a salesman from Gordonville.
A friend said the plane was scheduled to be flown by Jim Sheaffer, of Lititz, and a student pilot to an air show in Lumberton, N.C.
Former club member John E. Henderson, of Lancaster, said on Tuesday he helped Sheaffer clean the 1970 Cessna and prepare it to be flown Wednesday. Henderson said Sheaffer was expected to be accompanied by a student pilot, Troy Martin, of Akron, Pa.
"I am embarrassed and dismayed. It's awful easy for this to happen to anyone, you know what I mean? It's just a shame that it happened to this guy, because he is one swell guy," Henderson said.
Martin's mother said she saw her son on television being led away from the plane.
Henderson described Sheaffer as an experienced pilot who should have known to avoid restricted airspace.
"But obviously he didn't. Otherwise he wouldn't have been in there. I've never even considered talking to him about it," said Henderson, a retired engineer from Lancaster. Henderson said he had not spoken to Sheaffer on Wednesday.
The airplane's presence in the skies over Washington forced the evacuation of the Capitol and White House. Military jets scrambled to intercept the aircraft and fired warning flares.
Mel S. Glick, who owns the Smoketown Airport, about 60 miles west of Philadelphia, said he arrived at the airport around 1 p.m. to find state troopers there asking him about the plane. He said he didn't see it leave.