Accused Part 135 Operator Responds To FAA Press
Release, Allegations
Actions involving the controversial
Birmingham FSDO have again hit the news as Part 135 operator has
refuted FAA statements and a Press Release released after the
FAA supended the operating certificate of Darby
Aviation. The statement was compiled and released to
the media by Attorney Deanna L. Weidner of Anderson &
Weidner, LLC.
Darby Statement
Darby Aviation disputes the claims outlined in the Federal
Aviation Administration's (“FAA”) recent filing
suspending Darby Aviation's Part 135 certificate, which permits
Darby Aviation to charter aircraft operations for hire to the
general public. This suspension action revolves around a manual
that the FAA has claimed is insufficient, however it is the same
manual that has been approved since 1992 and incorporates all
changes required and approved by six (6) prior FAA inspectors. In
fact, the present Front Line Manager of the Alabama, North Florida
Flight Standards District Office (the “Birmingham
FSDO”) and Darby Aviation's present FAA Principal Operations
Inspector (“POI”) each approved this manual before
wrongfully revoking the same document.
The FAA is an agency of the United States of America. Long ago,
our forefathers adopted the United States Constitution. This very
important document is what distinguishes us from many other
countries and provides each American citizen with due process of
law and prevents the federal government from taking a
citizen’s property without fair consideration. A Part 135
certificate, a pilot’s certificate, a mechanic’s
certificate, an inspector’s certificate and an
aircraft’s certificate are property and cannot be taken by
the United States Government without due process of law.
Upon information and belief, particular individuals at the
Birmingham FSDO, including the Manager, the Front Line Operations
Manager, Darby Aviations’ POI, Darby Aviation’s prior
Principal Maintenance Inspector (“PMI”), an Aviation
Safety Inspector, and perhaps others have conspired to put Darby
Aviation out of business. It appears the motive behind this
conspiracy relates to the 2005 Platinum accident in Teterboro, New
Jersey. Platinum was a company that was introduced to Darby
Aviation by the PMI and an Aviation Safety Inspector ("ASI") from
the Birmingham FSDO. The Birmingham FSDO requested Darby Aviation
amend its certificate to add Jets leased by Platinum and Darby
complied. After all regulatory modifications and requirements were
satisfactorily completed, the FAA approved the addition of the
Platinum Jets to operate under Darby’s certificate and
approved the structure of the relationship. Per the approved
contracts and manuals, Platinum was required to submit proper
documentation to Darby and to receive approval before conducting
any flight under its certificate. Subsequently, without submitting
documentation and without Darby’s knowledge, sanction or
approval, Platinum took the subject 2005 flight that resulted in
the accident. The Platinum incident was fully investigated and it
was determined that Platinum did not obtain the proper
authorizations from Darby before conducting the subject flight.
The Teterboro FSDO sought to
suspend indefinitely Darby Aviation’s Part 135 Certificate,
claiming that the contract with Platinum that was recommended and
approved by the Birmingham FSDO resulted in Darby Aviation not
having operational control over Platinum. The National
Transportation Safety Board (“NTSB”) Administrative Law
Judge (“ALJ”) found Darby innocent of all charges and
ruled that Platinum violated the approved contract by conducting
the flight without authority, as it was required to do. A panel of
the NTSB who did not hear the testimony reversed the ALJ opinion
and found that the Birmingham FSDO and Darby Aviation were equally
culpable in not preventing Platinum from committing fraud and
conducting the unapproved, unsanctioned, and forbidden flights. The
FAA has publicly admitted to its errors in the Darby case.
The NTSB panel also ruled that the FAA must act in good faith
with Darby Aviation and that any suspension had to be lifted once
Darby Aviation and the Birmingham FSDO restructured any approved
arrangement that the NTSB could consider as insufficient
operational control. Darby Aviation was subjected to an NTSB
inspection, an OSIP inspection and a NASIP inspection, all of which
Darby passed without issue. Darby Aviation was given full approval
to continue operations in a short period of time. The Birmingham
FSDO, however, was reprimanded by superiors for failing to
sufficiently perform its duties. This apparently embarrassed the
Birmingham FSDO and it has been on a mission to put Darby Aviation
out of business ever since.
Shortly thereafter, the individuals at the Birmingham FSDO who
supported Darby Aviation’s innocence either
“retired” or were faced with frivolous certificate
actions as punishment. For instance, Ed Jeszka, Darby’s
Principal Operations Inspector (“POI”) in the
Birmingham FSDO when Platinum was at issue and Ray Ledbetter, a
veteran and lifelong aviator who was not involved in Platinum, but
was merely caught in the cross fire, were served with emergency
revocations of their pilot certificates for reporting a check ride
occurred on March 28th that the Birmingham FSDO claimed occurred on
February 11th. The FAA admitted the check ride occurred and was
satisfactorily completed, but claimed the alleged use of a later
date was material and falsely reported with the intent to deceive,
although the FAA never articulated any reasonable motive to use a
later date. The check ride could not have occurred on February
11th, because on that date Ed Jeszka still had a feeding tube
surgically inserted due to his fight with stomach cancer. Jeszka
and Ledbetter were also able to corroborate their testimony by
introducing cellular phone records that proved the pilots were at
the Jasper airport on March 28th and that both phones were inactive
during the time they took the check ride. The only evidence
submitted by the FAA was the testimony of a local aviator, Joey
Sanders, who testified that he could not remember whether or not he
saw Jeszka and Ledbetter at the airport on March 28th, a date
approximately fourteen months before he testified. Later, another
local witness came forward and swore under oath that he heard
Ledbetter on the radio on March 28th, but the NTSB refused to allow
the individual to testify.
At the same time, the Birmingham FSDO began launching numerous
frivolous attacks upon Darby Aviation, its pilots, mechanics and
Director of Operations, apparently in an attempt to run Darby
Aviation out of business.
For instance, below are summaries of some of the frivolous
actions that have been brought against Darby Aviation and its
employees to further the Birmingham FSDO’s vendetta:
-
The Administrator formally grounded
a Lear Jet while Darby Aviation had it voluntarily grounded for
maintenance and an inspection. Subsequently, the Administrator
dismissed this action.
- The Administrator brought emergency actions against
Darby’s Chief Pilot and Director of Operations for alleged
log book violations, but later voluntarily dismissed these
actions.
- The Administrator sought a civil penalty from Darby Aviation
claiming that a Darby pilot’s check ride was invalid because
the check airman (another Darby pilot) was allegedly not current.
Although the regulations expressly provide that an instrument
proficiency check can be substituted for the general competency
requirements, the Administrator claimed the Federal Aviation
Regulations (“FAR”) do not mean what they say because
the questions required for an instrument proficiency test do not
cover all of the general subjects listed in the competency section
(14 C.F.R 135.293(a)(1) and (4-8)). Darby prevailed at the initial
hearing. The Judge ruled that the language of the FAR was clear on
its face and that there would be no reason to substitute if the
tests were the same. The FAA appealed to the Administrator. The
Administrator has withheld its appellate ruling for nearly a year,
without providing any justification for the delay.
- Darby Aviation’s present POI revoked all check airman
authority from Darby Aviation due to the above allegations that
were later determined to be without justification. Darby's check
airman authority has not been reinstated, despite Darby’s
victory in front of the ALJ, because the inspector revoked approval
of Darby's operations manual and training program and now claims
that due to the revocation, Darby does not have enough business to
justify check airmen. There is no inspector in the state of Alabama
that can conduct check rides on a Gulfstream Jet, so a qualified,
approved and current check airman will have to be located and
procured by the FAA at the cost of the tax payers to conduct each
check ride in the future.
- Due to the Birmingham FSDO’s repeated attacks upon Darby
Aviation and claims that Darby was not complying with non-existent
record requirements, Darby Aviation requested permission to hire
additional employees to assure future compliance with all
regulations. The Birmingham FSDO denied this request. The
Birmingham FSDO said Darby Aviation did not have sufficient
activity to warrant additional employees (it had already wrongfully
revoked its manual), yet the attacks for supposed record violations
continued.
- Darby Aviation requested that the Birmingham FSDO assign a
different POI to Darby Aviation because the present inspector is
unable to communicate with Darby Aviation, has stated that Darby
Aviation has a “target on its back” and has determined
to run Darby Aviation out of business, regardless of Darby
Aviation’s compliance. The Birmingham FSDO refused. Another
Birmingham FSDO representative has also warned representatives of
Darby Aviation that the Birmingham FSDO has put a “target on
Darby’s back.”
-
The Administrator suspended
Darby’s Chief Pilot’s certificate and brought a civil
penalty action against Darby Aviation, claiming that the pilot did
not complete an oral or written test within twelve months of
particular flights in accordance with 14 C.F.R. 135.293(a). Darby
produced the actual written tests the Chief Pilot passed that were
approved by the Birmingham FSDO. Darby offered uncontroverted
testimony and forms establishing the oral test and the written
tests were taken and passed. No evidence was offered to the
contrary. Instead, the Administrator argued that the approved tests
were insufficient because although only two of the competency check
subparts expressly require the test to be taken on “each type
of aircraft flown,” the general subparts must also be
completed on each type of aircraft flown. It would not make sense
and would be contrary to regularly accepted rules of construction
if two subparts of the regulation explicitly state “for each
type of aircraft flown,” while the other general subparts
omit that language, yet all subparts were required "for each type
of aircraft flown." (See 14 C.F.R. 135.293(a)(1-8).
- Additionally, the present POI faxed to SimCom written and
signed approval of a SimCom check airman prior to the date the
Chief Pilot took, passed and paid for the simulator check ride in
the Lear Jet. During opening arguments at the hearing, over a year
later, Darby first learned that the Birmingham FSDO POI alleged the
check airman had not been approved because the inspector claimed he
only signed the approval so the pilots could test under parts 61
and 91 of the FARs and, therefore, the check rides were allegedly
void. This argument was obviously manufactured after the fact, as
Darby would not need approval to test under Part 61 or Part 91.
SimCom wrote to the Administrator and explained that it charged
Darby Aviation and conducted the check rides in reliance upon the
inspector's written approval of the check airmen. This action is
presently on appeal to the NTSB Board.
- The Administrator suspended Darby Aviation’s Director of
Maintenance’s (“DOM”) certificates claiming that
the Lear Jet and the Gulfstream II were unairworthy and alleging
the DOM failed to record maintenance performed in the maintenance
records The Administrator voluntarily dismissed the allegations
regarding the Lear Jet after several months. With regard to the
Gulfstream, an expert testified the plane was in fact airworthy and
the Court agreed, dismissing the frivolous unairworthy claims.
Despite the uncontested testimony, the ALJ found that the mechanic
should have recorded in the logbook that he did not repair what did
not need to be repaired per the Gulfstream manual. If this were the
case, nearly every Gulfstream II or III maintenance provider would
be subject to suspension as the expert testified that of the
hundreds of logbooks he has reviewed while working at Gulfstream
and other repair facilities, no operator has ever recorded not
doing the unnecessary repairs in a maintenance log book. Despite
the court's ruling in Darby's favor, the Administrator has not yet
rescinded letters of investigation that it issued to the Chief
Pilot for flying the allegedly unairworthy Gulfstream and to the
company for another civil penalty.
- The Birmingham FSDO PMI admitted under oath to receiving a
monetary award for suspending the certificate of Darby’s
mechanic. An Aviation Safety Inspector from the Birmingham FSDO
admitted under oath that prior to the unannounced inspection of
Darby’s facility, several Birmingham FSDO officials met
together to plan actions against Darby Aviation and that he was
aware of the Platinum incident.
The instant Part 135 certificate suspension is equally frivolous
and designed to harass. Darby Aviation's operations and training
manuals have been approved since 1992. Darby Aviation has had six
(6) different Principal Operations Inspectors since 1992. Prior to
the present inspector, Darby Aviation has always had communicative
and positive working relationships with its inspectors. After the
meeting amongst the Birmingham FSDO officials where the Birmingham
FSDO planned an attack against Darby Aviation, the present POI
threatened to suspend Darby Aviation’s operating and training
manuals, citing a particular number of vague and petty issues with
the manuals that had long been approved. Darby amended the manuals
as requested and resubmitted the manuals. The present Inspector
refused approval, not because of the alleged issues cited
previously, but because of new alleged vague and petty complaints.
Darby amended each of the new sections to which the inspector
claimed insufficiency and resubmitted the manuals. Again, the
inspector refused approval, citing to entirely new alleged issues.
Darby amended and resubmitted, only to receive new complaints.
Again and again, the inspector picked different issues of which to
complain and finally revoked Darby Aviation's manuals. Darby
Aviation met with Birmingham FSDO officials on numerous occasions,
requesting a complete list of all alleged errors or issues that
required amendment prior to resuming Part 135 operations. On more
than one occasion, the Birmingham FSDO told Darby Aviation that it
was “not in the manual writing business” and refused to
articulate the alleged problems. At one point, the Front Line
Operations Manager and the Manager of the Birmingham FSDO told
Darby Aviation that if it made the final changes, the manuals would
again be approved. Darby made the changes, but the Birmingham FSDO
did not honor its agreement. Instead, over a year later, the
present action to indefinitely suspend Darby’s Part 135
Certificate ensued.

Now the FAA attempts to utilize the numerous revisions to claim
that Darby's manuals were insufficient on numerous occasions. Darby
Aviation hired a professional company to write the manuals, the
manuals were approved for over a decade and Darby Aviation hired a
former FAA inspector to help with the revisions. Nothing Darby
Aviation could submit would be acceptable to the Birmingham FSDO
because the goal is to put Darby Aviation out of business, not to
correct alleged deficiencies in the manuals.
The allegation that Darby
Aviation’s Chief Pilot and Director of Operations are
incompetent is offensive, disparaging and blatantly false. The
Chief Pilot has approximately 16,000 flight hours, has held an
Airline Transport Pilot (“ATP”) rating for 30 years, is
Helicopter rated and is type-rated in multiple jet aircraft,
including: 20 and 30 series Lear Jets, Gulfstream II and Gulfstream
IV heavy jets. The Director of Operations has approximately 20,000
flight hours, worked for Continental Airlines for many years, has
held an Airline Transport Pilot (“ATP”) rating for 41
years, is typerated in 20 and 30 series Lear Jets, Gulfstream II,
DC-10 and Boeing 727 airline jets. Each have extensive and rare
international charter experience for passenger, hazmat and
life-flight services and each have serviced large corporations,
U.S. and foreign governments, the United States Military, and many
well known entertainers and politicians over the past 20 years.
Prior to the recent attacks by the Birmingham FSDO, neither the
Chief Pilot, nor the Director of Operations had ever received a
violation or were ever investigated for wrong doing.
Darby Aviation has appealed this improper certificate suspension
and will appeal any other frivolous and unfounded orders entered by
the Administrator or the FAA. If necessary, Darby Aviation will
proceed to protect its constitutional rights in the Federal
District Court and will pursue any and all remedies available to
Darby Aviation against the individuals involved. Darby Aviation's
efforts to fight this clear vendetta/conspiracy against the
unlimited resources of the United States Government, however, has
been daunting, exhausting and extremely expensive. Darby Aviation
has suffered great financial loss and its reputation has been
damaged by the FAA's unsupported and baseless allegations. These
allegations were intentionally designed to destroy the company and
its employees. Congress has relinquished control to the
Administrator, who in turn has sanctioned or failed to properly
supervise its rogue employees and their improper actions. This
flagrant governmental misconduct must be exposed and the
responsible individuals must be held accountable.