After Private Pilots Complain, Customs Rethinks Intercept
Policy
Tom and Bonnie Lewis were stopped on a
trip from Texas to New Hampshire because they were flying along a known drug air
route
Federal border security agents have sharply reduced
intercepts of general aviation aircraft, following complaints by pilots that
excessive police action at small airports is restricting the freedom to
fly.
An official with U.S. Customs and Border Protection's Office of Air
and Marine Operations told NPR his agency has heard pilots' grievances and the
program is being altered so as not to needlessly affront law-abiding
pilots.
In recent years, more and more pilots have reported their
aircraft stopped for warrantless searches by aggressive
officers.
Stopping Grandma And Grandpa
Tom and Bonnie Lewis love
to fly airplanes so much that they live in a residential airpark near Fort
Worth, Texas, where their garage is a hangar.
Two years ago, they packed
their bags, loaded them into the airplane, and took off for Nashua, N.H., to
visit their daughter and her family. Mid-route, they stopped at an airport in
Frankfort, Ky., to refuel and spend the night, when they noticed that a small
jet had landed directly behind them, with no radio communication.
Four
federal agents shouldering assault rifles scrambled out of the jet and
surrounded the Lewis's little two-seater plane, asking for IDs.
"Asking
where we'd been, basically checking us out," says Tom Lewis. "It didn't take
them too long to figure out they had grandma and grandpa that were taking a trip
to New Hampshire to visit the grandkids."
He says the CBP agents were
courteous and professional.
After they realized the bewildered,
gray-haired couple were not drug smugglers, they lightened up. The officers said
they'd taken off from a base in Michigan and chased the red-and-white, aluminum
airplane across the country because it was flying a known drug air route from
Texas to the northeast. Tom Lewis thinks this is absolute nonsense.
"It's
a growing infringement of our freedoms as Americans to travel within the country
without fear of being stopped and inspected every time we turn around," he
says.
Exasperated pilots say incidents like this, in which law
enforcement officials stop and request to search a private aircraft without a
warrant, are not isolated.
But according to the agency, the problem is
being fixed.
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