The Gang That Can't Get Their Facts Straight, Also Can't Fly An
Air Race
News/Analysis By Jim Campbell, ANN
CEO/Editor-In-Chief/Troublemaker
It may rank as one of the weirdest series of stories we've done
in quite the while (though the Cirrus/COPA mess is promising to
beat it by a fair amount... shameful details to come), but the
bizarre saga of the Ultimate Air Race Challenge appears to have
been based on little more than hot air... and quite a lot of people
either did, or should have, known it.

An aggressive racing program once described as "Mixed Martial
Arts In The Air" was claimed to have been approved by the FAA long
ago -- it never was.
It was supposed to have been crewed by seven of the best pilots
in the world -- it isn't and they aren't.
The team was said to have trained and practiced for months on
end and qualified to rigorous standards -- well, they
didn't.
And when the FAA publicly denied any approvals for the team,
they ignored reality and told media representatives, far and wide,
that the race was on, gave television and newspaper interviews to
that effect and made dozens of claims with little basis in reality.
Oooppsss...
And finally, the airshow organization and the airport authority
for Camarillo Airport's airshow was warned multiple times by a
great number of persons of the many hazards, falsehoods and
concerns inherent in the wild claims of the UARC program.
Regardless, they promoted the organization despite knowing full
well that the site, team, aircraft, pilots and racing program not
was not approved by the FAA... but had been turned down in no
uncertain terms...
And, as of this moment, Wings Over Camarillo and the UARC
organization continue to claim that they will have an air race this
weekend...
In the meantime; the FAA has made it clear that there will be
no such thing.

Mind you, both UARC as well as airshow personnel, appear to be
setting the FAA up as the bad guy in all of this, but ANN's
extensive discussions, investigations and consultations leave us in
the oddly unusual position to not only defend the FAA's actions but
to admit admiration for the very comprehensive, professional and
SAFETY oriented course they have taken in dealing with the
controversial and often errant actions of UARC.
And despite a number of attempts to get some help and attention
paid to this matter... one in which ANN saw all manner of potential
hazards (some of them quite terrifying--really), it basically came
down to this news service (again), the FAA, and a lone California
blogger with a love for aviation (Kristy Graham, who was the admin
for www.aviationcriminal.com),
to bring this matter to a point where the hazards became clear
enough to put a stop to a program that truly appeared to be, at
best, ill-advised.
Don't forget that while there was a tremendous of controversy
surrounding UARC pilot David Riggs as well as Chris Rounds... whose
history led some to question the safety and legality of this
program from the get-go, the actual details surrounding the actual
racing plan, itself, are frankly... ridiculous. The FAA confirmed,
while responding to ANN's interrogatories, that UARC presented its
original air race proposal to the FAA in the form of an operations
manual. The FAA conducted a standard analysis of the manual in
which (they) looked at four areas: pilot qualification; pilot
currency; safety operating rules; and race course diagram. FAA PAO
Ian Gregor noted that, "We found the manual was acceptable,
contingent upon site surveillance, for the first three areas but
not for the race course diagram. UARC invited an FAA evaluation
team to conduct on-site surveillance of their proposed race program
at Camarillo from August 8-12."
The FAA found that:
- Pilot qualification. UARC pilots did not
provide evidence to show they had the required amount of formation
flight, and airplane/hour experience levels to train under the UARC
race program. Five of the seven pilots did not have log book
evidence of the required airplane/hour experience.
- Safety operating rules: One pilot demonstrated
flight around the proposed race course and through the pylon field
in front of FAA inspectors last week. The inspectors believe the
pilot flew past the maximum allowable fly-by bank angle of 75
degrees. We also had concerns that multiple aircraft flying in
close proximity, at approximately 15 feet altitude through pylons,
could pose a wake turbulence danger, and that an aircraft could be
caught in wake turbulence could possibly crash with debris going
into crowd. Finally, UARC did not provide scatter pattern diagrams
for either the proposed race course or the pylon course. Scatter
pattern diagrams are based on aircraft altitudes and predict where
debris would go in case of a midair
collisions.
- Race course: UARC did not submit a suitably
safe race course for Camarillo. The proposed race course layout
shows multiple roads being crossed, and some roads lead into a
spectator area that's inside (the) proposed race course. Roads of
this kind must be closed during (the) air race. The local airport
authority was not able to coordinate road closure.
- Airworthiness of aircraft. The UARC manual
requires video monitors in all aircraft. The FAA examined six of
the seven aircraft that would take part in the program. None of the
aircraft contained this required equipment.
Mind you, the FAA was well aware that Wings Over Camarillo had a
mess on its hands and had either been sold a bill of goods or
simply failed to check the bona fides behind all of UARC's hype
(hard to believe in light of the fact that they were warned
multiple times, by multiple parties). Since WOC/UARC seemed
destined to disappoint a LOT of people that would be coming to
their airshow, the Feds did offer a very mild, low-key, non-racing
alternative demonstration that might mollify the crowds that would
be coming to Camarillo to see honest-to-goodness air racing. Gregor
told ANN that the 'kinder/gentler' UARC demonstration flights would
have allowed them some very limited privileges to perform at WOC...
"The pilots would be restricted to flying single file through the
course, with no passing and no aerobatic maneuvers. Before being
allowed to perform in the show, each pilot must demonstrate for FAA
inspectors single file flight around the pattern at 500 feet, then
through the pylons without performing aerobatic flight. Only one of
the pilots has done a demonstration flights, and UARC has not
contacted us (E-I-C Note: as of late Tuesday,
08.16.11) as to arrange a time for the others to do so."

There were other problems... really simple requirements that
UARC apparently did not seem to be all that concerned about, but
are a part and parcel of some of the most basic airshow flight
demonstration programs. For instance, Gregor revealed that,
"...only one of the UARC pilots provided us with a Statement of
Aerobatic Competency, and his was limited to 800 feet AGL."
In comments directed toward the FAA personnel overseeing this
operation, ANN inquired, "A number of the pilots appear to have
little or no real air racing experience… what is being
required of them in regards to demonstrating their individual
competency to attempt these flights (much less the far more
aggressive race that was proposed earlier)?"
The FAA's inspection team responded that, in regards to the
substitute demonstration flights, UARC pilots, "...would have to
demonstrate they could fly the course without performing any
aerobatic maneuvers."
They added, "Concerning actual air racing: Race organizations
that have FAA-accepted training programs issue air race cards to
pilots who successfully complete the training. UARC's operations
manual details pilot ground and flight training. To ensure the
pilots have the skills to fly in a race environment, the FAA was to
observe the training and qualifications of the UARC pilots. This
training was not done during the Aug. 8-12 Camarillo visit." As a
matter of fact, no appreciable/verifiable attempt at training the
entire team in either program (the original UARC race plan or the
substitute flight demo proposed by the FAA) has been documented...
and there are now some 4 days to go before the so-called race.
With all this revealed, UARC is not going down quietly... and
neither, it appears, is the Camarillo airshow support group.
Over the weekend, despite direct knowledge of the FAA's refusal,
pilot Torrey Ward did one of the early morning TV shows on local
station KTLA... showing up in a spiffy flight suit and making some
breathless claims (which seemed to impress the heck out of the
female anchor...) about the upcoming AIR RACE and the very macho,
devil-may-care, dangers he faced in the process. The interview was
long on entertainment value and somewhat less accomplished in terms
of accuracy and reality. Ward, by the way, is another of the UARC
pilots who seems to be working under a claimed bio that is, so-far,
failing to hold up to scrutiny. Various UARC docs/quotes claim that
Ward is a military pilot who has flown 'covert missions' in the
Middle East... and yet, he has admitted that he is just a
"hobbyist" where these matters are concerned. The so-called
military background seems a bit over-played since he is,
reportedly, only a civilian UAV Flight Instructor. No covert
missions (by Ward) have been confirmed by any military or
government agency consulted thus far and even some recent
statements (again, by Ward) cast severe doubt on such
activities...

In a Tuesday story in the local Ventura County Star, Wings Over
Camarillo Air Boss Norman Hall, claimed that the pilots are
currently 'trying to get approval not as UARC members, but as a
pylon demonstration team under the show's general waiver.'
According to the VC Star article, Hall claims that 'FAA officials
gave the original race plan a tentative thumbs-up months ago.'
According to every FAA staffer consulted at the Regional and
National level, that statement is unverifiable. Hall appears to
have joined UARC in attempting to paint the FAA as the bad guys in
all this... "It's just been one issue after another... We are left
holding the bag because if they don't get approved, that makes us
look bad. We are trying to put a good product out there and we are
still waiting, even though we have already met all the requirements
they have requested."
And of course, there are the original issues surrounding
convicted criminal and erstwhile UARC Team Leader David Riggs (who
at one point, was supposed to have been thrown off the team). His
background and that of some of the UARC personalities leave one
wondering if the FAA does actually get to the ponderous point where
they will allow UARC to fly what has been humorously nicknamed the
"Camarillo Conga Line", whether or not these guys, individually or
collectively, can be trusted to fly the highly restrictive, very
mild demonstration flights that may all they are qualified to
undertake (and, lets face it, the jury is still out as to whether
they're capable of even that oh-so-simple flight profile).
Riggs, you may remember, is the flyer that cast quite a negative
pall on aviation (and aviators) with a pretty stupid stunt in which
he buzzed the Santa Monica pier with an L-39 and scared the bejesus
out of hundreds of people... some of whom reportedly wondered if
they were under attack. The stunt, which occurred in November of
2008, was allegedly an effort to generate "buzz" for a movie. The
FAA almost immediately revoked Riggs' pilot certificate, but on
March 17th of 2009, an administrative law judge modified that
revocation order to a 210 day suspension, and it was eventually
reinstated.
Riggs was criminally charged and eventually sentenced by a
California Superior Court to 60 days in jail, 36 months probation,
and a $900 fine in connection with the incident. He was also
ordered to perform 60 days community service cleaning up Santa
Monica Beach -- and all of that sentence reportedly still awaits
imposition -- and could come at any time. It was not the only
legal/criminal altercation for Riggs -- who has a long
history, documented in a number of press reports, of his legal
altercations... one of which got him incarcerated in a foreign
prison for a year. He has created great enmity among a significant
portion of the aviation community... at least one of whom, the
aforementioned Kristy Graham (who appears to have done a heck of a
job documenting a large part of Riggs's history) has gone so far as
to dedicate a web site to his alleged transgressions (www.aviationcriminal.com).
Above and beyond all that, there are multiple accusations of
aircraft damage and theft, illegal flight training operations,
extensive issues with how he conducts business (including a great
number of allegations of fraud), and quite a few other concerns.
Add up just these 'few' details and its a wonder why anyone would
give Riggs, UARC, and his other claims and ventures the time of
day...
UARC Pilot David
Riggs

Of greatest concern, though, is this... had UARC managed to pull
off this race at Camarillo; there are great questions as to whether
it was possible to do so safely (and in the opinion of this pilot,
not a chance). The principal issue focuses on the fact that instead
of the proven Red Bull race profile (which has been known to have
its own set of hazards) of multiple gates, with turns in both
directions, allowing ONE AIRPLANE AT A TIME through those gates,
the UARC proposal would have allowed for a number of aircraft to
compete to get through the gates ALL AT THE SAME TIME.
Think about this... Ever see what happens when a half dozen
people all race toward a turn-style or door at the same time? The
result is chaos... and when you consider the dilemma inherent in
clearing a 50-60 foot tall 'gate' with multiple airplanes trying to
get through the same tightly confined physical space, at speeds
approaching 200 knots, with a great deal of focused energy, the
only word that comes to mind is...
... BOOM!!!
And while we, as citizens, have the right to put our own lives
at some risk, we do not have the right to do so when and where it
can hazard others... and according to the FAA folks who monitor
airshows year after year, the UARC proposal had the potential to
create hazards for persons on the ground. Had any of that been
allowed to occur, and had an accident happened, innocent people
could have been hurt (or worse) and the air-racing and airshow
business could have been dealt a fatal blow.
We doubt that this is the last we have heard of the UARC
Saga/Fiasco... and will keep you apprised as the story develops
(whew....).
ANN E-I-C Note: ANN thanks accomplished
aviation photographer, Eric Van Gilder, of Van Gilder Aviation
Photography, for the use of the UARC photos.