Here is some fresh aviation worth a look.
In Brazil a judge issued a warrant for Constantino de Oliveira, the co-founder of the Brazil airline Gol. The judge issued the warranty after officials claim that de Oliveira had ordered for two men to be killed over a land dispute. It is now thought that the judge has allowed Oliveira house arrest. Oliveira is one of the richest men in Brazil thought to be worth more than $1 billion earned through his bus and airline companies. Gol was starting in 2001 as a no thrills airline and has grown to the second largest airline in Brazil.
Gulfstream International Airlines has been fined $1.3 million for falsifying records that said how long their pilots had worked. This allowed their pilots to fly more hours than allowed by law. The FAA also said that the airline had installed non-approved parts and did not maintain their turboprops properly. Capt. Renslow trained with Gulfstream Training Academy, the academy and airline are sister companies. Although, the violations appear to have occurred after Renslow left Gulfstream.
There is a 36 year old woman in Texas who has pleaded guilty to fraudulently obtaining than selling Southwest Airline tickets. Tasha Mathis is facing up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Mathis pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud while nine others have been charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The ticket were suppose to be used to thank Southwest passengers but were instead sold.
Airplane parts and debris have turned up on a beach in Virginia. Virginia police officers contacted the FAA and no one is quite sure what they are from.
See the news story about the passenger noticing the fuel leak? Most articles forget to mention that Staff Sgt. Bachleda of the Air Force is an airman himself, and that the flight crew had notice that there was something fishy about the fuel burn. Bachleda did do the correct thing by alerting crew members of the leak. Although, most media outlets make Bachleda to be a regular passenger without aviation knowledge (and not an airman) and that the pilots did not notice that there was something going on with the fuel system. This only helps add to people’s fear about flying, when in reality flying is one of the most safest ways to travel.
And if you could not guess airline stocks are still down while oil has climb back up to over $60 a barrel.
Well the Air Transport Association has
A few things brought to my attention from the TSA blog,
