Well, against my better judgment, I broke down and watched the video and now feel compelled to respond.
Gryder has absolutely no idea what he is talking about. If you listen to his diatribe when discussing the CLE FSDO and their response, he completely misrepresents what is being said in the letter he quotes from. If you pay attention you can tell when he is reading the letter and when he is filling in what he thinks are blanks. The letter basically states that the CLE FSDO does not send out the hotline letter and doesn’t know when it will be sent out. That is all it appears to have said. Nothing more. It does not say that they did not investigate the complaint, or the accident, or the pilot’s wrongdoings. I am willing to bet they did all of that and more.
It is my understanding that when someone files a hotline complaint that the complaint gets assigned to the relevant office by the hotline complaint office. After the complaint investigation is completed, the local office (CLE FSDO) sends their findings to the hotline office so that that office can respond to the complainant. In the meantime, if the complaint investigation turned up evidence of a violation, the FSDO will pursue that investigation. And they will not discuss that investigation with anyone even the person who tipped them off to the violation via a complaint. They would definitely interview the complainant as they would any potential witness but are under no obligation to provide a status of that investigation to him. Besides, I guarantee that the pilot was very likely under investigation as a result of what the FSDO discovered during the accident investigation.
On this and other sites, the owner itemizes everything that was wrong with the aircraft and what he told the FAA in the hotline report. The thing is, as the owner of the aircraft he would have been interviewed by the FSDO as part of the accident investigation and even asked to provide a written statement. That statement should have included all the same info as his hotline complaint and his repetitive internet griping.
Gryder and others asserting that the FSDO or FAA did nothing in the way of an investigation solely based on the verbiage in the letter regarding the disposition of the hotline complaint do nothing more than illustrate their ignorance of the process.
I thought most pilots were too intelligent to fall for Gryder’s idiocy. He has serious heartburn against the government especially the FAA over their investigations into his own transgressions. I also would not be too surprised to learn that some of his extra bitterness is over him not being hired by either the FAA or the NTSB as he truly seems to believe his knowledge and expertise exceeds theirs. Regardless he definitely suffers from a case of major butt hurt.
Gryder also fails to assign any responsibility or blame on the builder/owner of the aircraft for his role in the chain of events. As others have noted here and elsewhere, the aircraft seems to have some possible build errors and the owner’s judgment is called into question by his hiring of this particular mechanic, test pilot, and Titan expert. If the owner built the plane, he should have the knowledge to be able to maintain it. If he doesn’t, hopefully he was not awarded a repairman certificate for it. Though maybe he was finally realizing his own inadequacies and felt he needed this “expert” to help him not crash the plane.
I seem to recall Gryder is big on throwing around concepts such as links in the accident chain or the Swiss cheese model. Strange that he left out the biggest hole in the cheese or the weakest link in the chain. But perhaps it didn’t fit his narrative.