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View Full Version : L@ser hits Westjet flight in YYC


Kickingpost
17th Oct 2008, 02:12
October 16, 2008



CBC News
Someone used a hand-held l@zer pointer to target a plane leaving from the Calgary airport. (Canadian Press)
Transport Canada and police are investigating a complaint that a WestJet pilot was hit in the eye with a green l@zer beam while his plane was taking off from the Calgary airport, CBC News has learned.

This is at least the fourth incident this year where someone has used a hand-held l@zer pointer to target a plane leaving from, or arriving at, the Calgary airport.

The WestJet flight had just taken off from Calgary, bound for Kelowna, B.C., almost two weeks ago when a green l@zer briefly lit up the cockpit, said WestJet official Scott Wilson.

The first officer looked out to see where it was coming from and was hit directly in the eyes.

The crew member did not suffer any permanent damage, which could jeopardize a pilot's career.

"As soon as they got to [the] destination, we had them off-loaded from the aircraft and report to emergency for a proper ophthalmologic exam," said Wilson. "And we actually had one more followup when they returned to Calgary a day later."

Wilson said powerful l@zer pointers are widely available and safe to use according to their instructions. But he warns that the police take incidents where a plane is being tracked with a l@zer very seriously, especially when planes are landing or taking off.

"I don't know if the individuals that are perpetrating such things truly understand the danger of the l@zer versus it's kind of fun to point a light at the aircraft. But you know, anything that can cause long-term ill effects to our employees or our guests causes us concern, great concern quite honestly."

Transport Canada said had received at least 33 reports of bright lights shining into cockpits from the ground over the past two years in Canada, as of April.

David Mackow pleaded guilty earlier this year to breaching the Aeronautics Act after an Air Canada Jazz pilot was distracted by a green l@zer beam while landing in Calgary on Oct. 15, 2007. The l@zer beam came from an apartment in the city's downtown core.

The pilot reported the incident and Calgary police dispatched its HAWCS helicopter to investigate. Mackow, a forklift operator, pointed the green beam into the helicopter.

Mackow told police he was "just having some fun," but was fined $1,000. Court records show that he later expressed remorse for his actions.



What the ????..............................



"As soon as they got to [the] destination, we had them off-loaded from the aircraft and report to emergency for a proper ophthalmologic exam," said Wilson. "And we actually had one more followup when they returned to Calgary a day later."

If it was so bad that they need to be examined then why not land in Calgary instead of flying 1 hour to Kelowna?

AND...........

I hope they didnt operate the flight back to Calgary a day later if it was still bothering them. Unfit for duty?

llnflder
17th Oct 2008, 02:31
have you been to Rhodes,Greece.tourists with lasers on the flight path.Seems more common in Europe.

er340790
17th Oct 2008, 12:34
Quote: Mackow told police he was "just having some fun," but was fined $1,000. Court records show that he later expressed remorse for his actions.

Frankly it sounds like the Court was 'just having some fun' too. A custodial sentence, however short, for reckless endangerment would have sent the right message to any other clowns out there.

rotornut
18th Oct 2008, 13:00
I think the charge was probably under s. 430(2) of the Code - Mischief Endangering Life or possibly s. 248 - Interfering with Transportation Facilities.

In either case maximum sentence is imprisonment for life. I completely agree that a bit of jail for these guys might send out the right message.

Carrier
18th Oct 2008, 13:45
Quote: “I completely agree that a bit of jail for these guys might send out the right message.”

Sending him to an expensive taxpayer-funded “holiday camp” where he is nice and warm and well fed for the winter, which may well be what he wants, is hardly going to be a deterrent. It will just encourage others to do the same, particularly next autumn when they want to avoid the winter.
Corporal punishment is the best deterrent. When I lived in South Africa three decades ago juvenile delinquents and vandals were sentenced to several strokes of the cane. The sentence was fittingly administered at the police station by the cops who had had the trouble of tracking and apprehending these trouble makers. Few came back for another dose!
The birch in the Isle of Man used to be equally effective at controlling bikers in TT Week and the American brat who damaged cars in Singapore and whose caning sentence was halved because of interference with justice by Wimp Clinton still learnt his lesson and served as a deterrent to others.
Also when was the last time you saw convicts in Canada outside in a chain gang making some restitution to society by cleaning up litter, repairing roads, etc?
Canada lacks guts and fails to protect innocent citizens and taxpayers!

rotornut
18th Oct 2008, 14:18
Sending him to an expensive taxpayer-funded “holiday camp” where he is nice and warm and well fed for the winter, which may well be what he wants, is hardly going to be a deterrent.\

If you get less than 2 years you go into the provincial system which is definitely not a "holiday camp". Provincial jails can be pretty awful from what I've heard from people who have been in them.

As for deterrence, a jail sentence can send out a strong message to the general public. While not everyone will be discouraged there is a strong argument that a jail sentence, at least for crimes involving a high level of intent (mens rea), can be effective in general deterrence.

Panama Jack
18th Oct 2008, 16:50
Meanwhile, in my little corner of the world:

'l@zer guns' flashed as plane lands MANAMA

A GANG which allegedly aimed a l@zer dazzler at a plane landing at Bahrain International Airport has been arrested.

Police caught them as they were aiming the l@zers at the aircraft while it was landing.

They have appeared before the General Prosecutor to be interrogated and face charges, Interior Ministry Assistant Under-Secretary for Legal Affairs Colonel Mohammed Rashid Buhmood said yesterday.

He also warned against such criminal acts, which could carry life imprisonment, in addition to sanctions stipulated by the law on civil aviation.
Under the penal law, convicts could even get capital punishment in case of casualties.

The ban also applies to the use of dazzling lights to blur aircraft during descent.

Other aircraft crews have reported use of l@zers and dazzling lights, which prompted the Interior Ministry to take strong action.