Another Flyer Pays The Price For Standing Up To The FAA
I may have to keep this short and
not-so-sweet... because at the moment, I do not trust my ability to
string together more than a few sentences without a few choice
invectives... the kind that will get me some nasty emails in
return. Suffice it to say, its been a tough day... when it should
have been something quite different. The last few days have been
truly wild and some inspired conversations, brainstorming sessions
and meetings have allowed me to put together a plan that has me
more excited about them than anything I've done since I conceived
of Aero-News over a dozen years ago. No kidding... I've got a
radical series of ideas... radical enough to succeed and targeted
at things that can truly make a difference to the part of the world
that I care so much about... the aviation community.
Pretty darned excited, I'd set aside most of today to start
writing about it all and detail the first of a series of daring,
even risky, initiatives that I feel REALLY pumped up about... and
had barely sat down and started checking messages... until one
arrived from former FAA Inspector and aviation whistleblower Ed
Jeszka, whose predicament we have reported upon a number of
times.
"Jim, Ray Ledbetter, died this morning."
Damn.
Who was he? Why should we care? Because he was one of us... and
because part of our government let him down.
Ray was the latest victim in a distressing pattern of FAA
payback that occurs, all too often, when someone speaks truth to
their power. Ledbetter and Jeszka were involved in the fallout
following their pseudo-involvement in the details surrounding the
FAA's attempt to target
Darby Aviation.
According to statements provided by those associated with Darby
(and statements which we believe to have significant credibility),
the Teterboro FSDO sought to suspend indefinitely Darby
Aviation’s Part 135 Certificate, claiming that their contract
with
Platinum Jet Management -- a contract that was
recommended and approved by the Birmingham FSDO -- resulted
in Darby Aviation not having operational control over Platinum. The
NTSB Administrative Law Judge 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 reportedly 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.'
According to Darby's counsel,
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 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 of
that year. 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.
Despite all that, Ledbetter and Jeszka lost their tickets and
experienced what happens to most whistleblowers who run afoul of
certain segments of the FAA... they were prosecuted with a
vengeance and with that, the part of their aviation life that
the FAA could steal -- their flying future was lost to them. Both
men fought the FAA, with great expense and against a legal
juggernaut that is positively and legally disposed toward the
Administrative bureaucracy that the FAA thrives in... and is devoid
of many of the Constitutional protections that even the most
hardened criminals can take advantage of... so long as they are not
aviators. The fight has been a tough one with a number of setbacks
along the way... but as Ray grew ill and was in the process of
succumbing to cancer, there was an earnest hope that he would have
his Pilot privileges restored before God called him home.
That didn't happen... Ray died and the Feds that took away so
much of this man's life have another flyer's scalp to brag about.
This is not our government's finest moment... and it is but one of
many in which those who speak truth to power pay the price of their
convictions and their conscience. I take this personally, as I have
to come to love this nation and those who fly over it with
incredible emotion... and truly feel that my best efforts, from
here on out, are best expended in their defense. I know and respect
so many who feel the same... and they have my unrestricted support
and admiration.
USAF veteran, pilot, and patriot, Ray Ledbetter, has gone
west... as have the hopes and dreams of so many whose only crime is
to believe that the truth would set them free...