Man Charged With Joyriding Plane Drunk

Brutuskend

Lifer
Apr 2, 2001
26,558
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Man Charged With Joyriding Plane Drunk
By JIM FITZGERALD, Associated Press Writer
Wed Jun 22, 7:32 PM ET



HARRISON, N.Y. - An intoxicated 20-year-old stole a small plane and took two friends on a three-hour, predawn joyride early Wednesday that ended with a safe landing at a closed airport, authorities said.


A Westchester County Airport security car met the plane at 4:15 a.m., and "a significant number of beer cans" spilled to the ground when the plane doors opened, County Executive Andrew Spano said.

The plane's pilot, Philippe Patricio, of Bethel, Conn., was arrested with a blood alcohol level of 0.15 percent ? nearly double the legal limit for driving in New York state, said county Police Commissioner Thomas Belfiore. His two 16-year-old passengers were not charged.

The single-engine, four-seat Cessna had taken off at about 1:30 a.m. from the Danbury (Conn.) Municipal Airport, some 25 to 30 miles from the Westchester airport.

Spano was incensed, saying that the post-Sept. 11 security measures in place at the Westchester airport were not duplicated at Danbury.

"We can only make ourselves safe here (Westchester)," Spano said. "It still leaves us vulnerable to what happened."

Paul Estefan, administrator of Danbury Municipal Airport, rejected the criticism, saying the airport is fenced in and patrolled by police officers.

Patricio was charged with criminal possession of stolen property, reckless endangerment, resisting arrest and driving while intoxicated, Belfiore said. He said the DWI charge accuses Patricio of taxiing through the airport while drunk, since there are no state laws applying to flying while intoxicated.

The plane was nearly out of gas when it landed, and it appeared that Patricio became lost during his time in the air, authorities said. It was unclear how he managed to land safely in his condition, on a small, unlighted taxiway, authorities said.

"There has been some internal talk about that accomplishment," said Belfiore. Spano said Patricio had seven hours of flight instruction but no license.

Arlene Murray, a Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman, said the agency was investigating.

She identified the owner of the plane as Arrow Aviation of Danbury. A call to Arrow was answered by a man who said the company was not making any statements.

A message was left at the only listed number in Bethel for a person named Patricio; it was not immediately returned.

 

Spacehead

Lifer
Jun 2, 2002
13,067
9,858
136
Patricio was charged with criminal possession of stolen property, reckless endangerment, resisting arrest and driving while intoxicated, Belfiore said. He said the DWI charge accuses Patricio of taxiing through the airport while drunk, since there are no state laws applying to flying while intoxicated.
I just heard on the news a couple of weeks ago that the law is being changed in PA to make flying while intoxicated a crime. Apparently it's not a crime now :confused:
 

crab

Diamond Member
Jan 29, 2001
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It may not be a crime, but the FAA WILL pull his license. 100% garunteed.
 

phillc

Member
Oct 19, 2004
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Originally posted by: crab
It may not be a crime, but the FAA WILL pull his license. 100% garunteed.

What license? He didn't have one.

The fact he landed on a dark, unlighted taxiway, while drunk must have been pure luck. That would be impressive for a sober pilot.
 

crab

Diamond Member
Jan 29, 2001
7,330
19
81
Originally posted by: phillc
Originally posted by: crab
It may not be a crime, but the FAA WILL pull his license. 100% garunteed.

What license? He didn't have one.

The fact he landed on a dark, unlighted taxiway, while drunk must have been pure luck. That would be impressive for a sober pilot.

Didnt see that. In that case, he'll never be able to obtain one...His student rating will be revoked, also.
 

cerebusPu

Diamond Member
May 27, 2000
4,008
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Originally posted by: crab
Originally posted by: phillc
Originally posted by: crab
It may not be a crime, but the FAA WILL pull his license. 100% garunteed.

What license? He didn't have one.

The fact he landed on a dark, unlighted taxiway, while drunk must have been pure luck. That would be impressive for a sober pilot.

Didnt see that. In that case, he'll never be able to obtain one...His student rating will be revoked, also.

with 7 hours of instruction. haw haw!

darwin candidate. those two friends must have been brave. or really drunk!