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The Old Fogducker
2nd Aug 2009, 23:03
Hello Folks:

It is rare I am able to add something to this prestigious group of aviation professionals, but I learned of this matter through a Canadian Aviation Forum that I frequent.

If true, this is an abuse of power which is truly unbelievable.

Here is a copy and paste from The Washington Examiner newspaper. Here is the link.

UPDATE: DOT IG urged to investigate one of FAA?s top docs | Washington Examiner (http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/blogs/SharpSticks/UPDATE-DOT-IG-urged-to-investigate-FAAs-top-physician--50965807.html)

UPDATE: DOT IG urged to investigate one of FAA’s top docs
By: Barbara Hollingsworth
Local Opinion Editor
07/17/09 12:05 AM EDT

For the past two and a half years, Dr. Michael A. Berry has been the manager of the Federal Aviation Administration’s Medical Specialties Division, Office of Aeronautical Medicine. According to an FAA spokesperson, Dr. Berry is in charge of medically certifying the fitness of all pilots and air traffic controllers in the United States. But some current and former airline employees say that Dr. Berry himself is not fit for the job.

A former Continental Airlines pilot who was medically grounded after complaining about safety problems in the cockpit told The Examiner that “the dreaded Dr. Berry,” as he is known among some pilots, falsified his medical records by telling the FAA he had “a neurological condition (seizure)” that ended his 17-year flying career.

“Dr. Berry found me ‘unfit for duty’ with no corroborating medical evidence, based upon a phone call to the pilot about whom I had complained... and then had the audacity to ask me for money to pay him to take care of it. He even wrote this in his notes...if I decided to work with him, he’d have to charge me for his time.”

The seizure diagnosis was refuted by the other pilot in a sworn affadavit dated Sept. 11, 2008: “I never told Dr. Berry that [the] First Officer...was unconscious or even had a disturbance of consciousness.”

In a written complaint to the FBI, the grounded pilot outlined what he called “The Berry System”:

* An airline pilot falls into disfavor with his employer, often for voicing safety concerns.
* The airline tells the pilot he will be fired if he doesn’t go see Dr. Berry.
* Dr. Berry reassures the pilot, saying he can’t do anything to get the pilot grounded.
* Dr. Berry informs the pilot that the exam results are all “perfectly normal” and asks why he’s there.
* The pilot complains about somebody and/or something at the airline.
* Dr. Berry falsifies a story based partly upon statements made about the pilot by fellow crewmembers.
* Ignoring any clinical evidence and opinions of other medical specialists, Dr. Berry finds the pilot “unfit for duty” and begins lobbying the FAA (paid for on an hourly basis by the airline) to begin the process of revoking the pilot’s medical certificate.
* Dr. Berry fraudulently alters the pilot’s past medical history.
* Dr. Berry refuses to send a copy of the fraudulent report to the pilot
* Dr. Berry calls the pilot and makes ambiguous statements about his report, then attempts to extort money from the pilot to “take care of it.”
* If the pilot rejects his “offer,” Dr. Berry sends his fraudulent reports to the FAA, deliberately excluding all data that is in the pilot’s favor (in violation of 18 U.S. Code Sec. 1001:3571).
* A friend of Dr. Berry’s at the FAA (Dr. Warren Silberman, DO) revokes the pilot’s FAA medical certificate via letter and immediately faxes a copy of the revocation letter to Dr. Berry.
* When the airline gets hit with a lawsuit, Dr. Berry sends them a copy of the FAA’s letter which, in reality, is nothing more than a product of his fraudulent scheme.
* The airline uses the FAA’s letter to effect the outcome of the lawsuit (and various other legal proceedings/investigations) in its favor.
* If the pilot complains to the State Board of Medical Examiners, Dr. Berry uses the FAA’s letter as “evidence” that he has done nothing wrong.
* The pilot becomes both unemployed and unemployable – without any hope of legal recourse.”


The Examiner has also obtained a copy of a letter from an anonymous employee at Continental Airlines that was sent to U.S. Department of Transportation Inspector General Calvin Scovel III on July 7, confirming the former Continental pilot’s account, and also alleging that Dr. Berry paid kickbacks to a former Continental executive:

“I can confirm recent reports from the Washington Examiner (and a few years earlier, USA Today) where stories were written about Continental’s harassment of pilots who complain about safety and other issues.

“Continental is a great company, but has a certain rogue element left over from the days of [former Continental CEO] Frank Lorenzo. Deb Reynolds, our Employee Assistance Program manager, had an arrangement with an unscrupulous doctor named Mike Berry, and working together they would rid the airline of unwanted pilots. Deb actually received a commission from Berry, and usually screened pilots for financial status and sexual orientation before engaging in this program.

“Berry would harass the complaining pilots by sticking them with needles to draw blood and poking his finger up their anuses, with the message being clear: we can do whatever we want with you.

“If the pilot complained further, Berry would make up an ambiguous story and try to get the pilot to pay him not to send it to the FAA. If the pilot wouldn’t pay him, he’d send it to his friend at the FAA, who would revoke the pilot’s medical certificate.

“Berry made a lot of money doing this, and was financially protected by us using the same arrangement he had at other airlines. Berry became very conceited, and left a substantial paperwork trail. You need to investigate this.”

Former Delta pilot Wayne “Captain WOW” Witter was also grounded by Dr. Berry for alleged health and psychiatric problems in 1993. Witter, a Naval Academy graduate (class of ’61) who won two Distinguished Flying Crosses in Vietnam, says despite his outstanding military career and 36,000 hours of flight time, Delta targeted him for dismissal in the 90’s after he and other employees began exposing pension fraud that led to the airline being forced to pay $640 million in federal penalties.

Witter says an FAA employee in Oklahoma told him that Dr. Berry had gone out there two or three at company expense in an effort to get the FAA to pull Witter’s medical certificate. Witter says other pilots personally told him that Dr. Berry extorted them, asking “How much is it worth to you?” to keep information that could ground them out of their files.

Capt. Witter appealed his medical grounding to the National Transportation Safety Board, which ordered him reinstated at Delta, although he was not allowed to fly again.

“Berry is one of the most dishonest men I’ve ever met, who has ruined more lives, all for power and money,” the now retired Witter told me.. After Dr. Berry’s unethical tactics were exposed during his appeal, Witter added, Delta stopped using him as its medical specialist.

Now he’s in charge of every FAA specialist in the country.

cessnapuppy
3rd Aug 2009, 04:56
"If true, this is an abuse of power which is truly unbelievable." Why would this be 'unbelievable' - There is one like this in every industry. The only part I find doubtful is that he would want any kickback from the pilot since his bread is buttered by the airline, but yes, I have personally seen the phenomenon described here. On the other end, you have the FAA inspectors tasked with overseeing Southwest being pilloried and abused.. Check out this story FAA whistle-blowers describe lapses in airline safety -- chicagotribune.com (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-040308-faa-hearings-webapr04,0,176000.story) read the part about the skin panels...sound familiar? http://www.pprune.org/rumours-news/381184-southwest-737-lands-yeager-airport-after-hole-fuselage.html

Bruce Wayne
3rd Aug 2009, 07:55
Quite frankly, it doesn't surprise me.

From personal experience, I have had two B767 IDG's stolen which were resold with counterfeit documentation and installed on an aircraft in active service.

The FAA has less than dragged it's feet on the matter, not only directly but also to the relevant law enforcement agencies that have attempted several times to gain copies from the FAA of the submitted paperwork on the items.

Its taken an ongoing civil suit against the perpetrators, who not only have a history of unapproved parts, but in fact have served time for activities with unapproved parts, yet the law enforcement involvement has been continually stonewalled.

IDG's are a flight safety critical item and knowing that two aircraft in active service have parts with falsified paperwork *should* be an issue of immediate concern.

This is not a case of *possible* wrongdoing, There are two archive file boxes of documented evidence, including falsified record copies including the perpetrators signatures, sitting on the floor about 3 feet from me.

Does the thread subject surprise me ? Not in the slightest.