Stolen Business Jet

bob loblaw

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Police Say Stolen Florida Plane Not Part Of Sinister Plot


POSTED: 6:53 am EDT October 12, 2005

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. -- Authorities say the theft of a charter jet that was reported stolen from St. Augustine, Fla., and ended up some 350 miles away near Atlanta was not part of a sinister plot, such as terrorism.
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The 10-passenger plane, a $7 million Cessna Citation 7, was found at the Gwinnett County Airport-Briscoe Field on Monday, said Darren Moloney, spokesman for the Gwinnett County Police Department. It remained there Tuesday, surrounded by orange cones.
"We've ruled out anything diabolical or sinister," Moloney said. "We didn't find anything threatening on the plane."
Moloney said there were not yet any suspects and it was not known whether more than one person was involved in the theft. But he said people have given "pretty detailed" information about the theft to county police, although he did not elaborate.
The plane is owned by Pinnacle Air of Springdale, Ark., which had no comment.
Crime scene investigators have gotten all the forensic evidence they need from the plane, and there was no evidence of weapons or drugs, Moloney said.
Bryan Cooper, assistant manager at St. Augustine Airport, said the plane was still there at midnight Saturday but was gone by 5 a.m. Cooper said there are three ways to get into the airport after midnight.
"You can fly in and land here, or have a key or authorized access or climb over the fence," Cooper said. "They could have used any one of the three."
The plane landed at Gwinnett sometime between 9 p.m. Saturday and 6 a.m. Sunday, Moloney said. It had some damage to the front edge of one wing but was not disabled, authorities said.
Although the plane landed when the airport's flight tower was not operating, officials said that is not unusual. Once on the ground, an automatic gate would have let the person out of the airport, Moloney said.
The Federal Aviation Administration is probing its own traffic system to see if there is any record of the plane flying during the time in question, FAA spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said.
Lisa Ray, spokeswoman at the Georgia Office of Homeland Security, had no comment on whether the theft raised larger questions of security at the airport, which is the fifth-busiest in Georgia. Two of the Sept. 11 hijackers, Mohamed Atta and Marwan al-Shehhi, trained there for a time.
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Its hard to believe that someone just stole a Citation. I understand its easy because there are no keys, but that takes alot of guts as well. Cant even imagine a Citation flying VFR. I almost think it was someone trying to prove a point so security would get tighter...who knows.....??
 
There were probably 5 citations sitting on the ramp. The pilots got to the airport at 3 am...preflighted the wrong airplane...and flew it to Georgia.

I can see that happening to me.
 
B767Driver said:
There were probably 5 citations sitting on the ramp. The pilots got to the airport at 3 am...preflighted the wrong airplane...and flew it to Georgia.

I can see that happening to me.

This may be a dumb question, but if that were the case, wouldn't they check the tail numbers.....?
 
When did that report come out about the pilots bringing the wrong airplane.. I havent seen that on in the paper here in ATL
 
JEP said:
This may be a dumb question, but if that were the case, wouldn't they check the tail numbers.....?


You would think. I know of cases where an airline had two jets sitting at side by side gates...and each jet was flown to the wrong destination. The gate agents posted the wrong destinations at each gate. N-Numbers obviously gate overlooked by the crew.
 
Tim said:
When did that report come out about the pilots bringing the wrong airplane.. I havent seen that on in the paper here in ATL


Tim,

It's not a report...no truth to it. Just my somewhat TIC theory.
 
its out now that the guy who stole it was from Atlanta area and a commecial licensed pilot. Some of his friends cheesed him out about taking the jet for a joy ride it looks like.
 
It was a 22 year old named Andrew Wolcott. he has his comm. / sel/ mel / ifr

051012122547_walcott.jpg


05101282115_plane.jpg
 
not anymore he doesn't...

guess he didn't really want to make it to the top! pretty stupid if you ask me!
 
Kristie said:
guess he didn't really want to make it to the top! pretty stupid if you ask me!

Not nearly as stupid as the 5 people who crawled into the back of the airplane and went with him.
 
Man Arrested, Charged in Jet Joy Ride

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By Associated Press

October 12, 2005, 2:46 PM EDT

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. -- A man was arrested on charges of stealing a charter jet and taking it on a 350-mile joy ride from Florida to Georgia, police said Wednesday.

The circumstances of the theft were not clear, but nothing threatening was found on the plane, police spokesman Darren Moloney said. The incident "appears to be a joy ride."








Daniel Andrew Wolcott, 22, of Buford was charged with felony theft and misdemeanor reckless conduct, police said, adding that additional federal charges were expected.

Investigators said they made the arrest after interviewing five people who said they were on the 10-passenger, $7 million Cessna Citation 7 when Wolcott flew it.

The plane, which is owned by Pinnacle Air of Springdale, Ark., was found Monday at the Gwinnett County Airport-Briscoe Field near Atlanta, police said. Moloney said a key is not needed to start the plane. The plane has a lock on the door, but it isn't difficult to pry open, he said.

Wolcott has a commercial rated pilots license but is not licensed to fly that type of plane, police said. The exact circumstances of how Wolcott obtained the plane were unclear.

Bryan Cooper, assistant manager at St. Augustine Airport, said the plane was still there at midnight Saturday but was gone by 5 a.m. The plane landed at Gwinnett sometime between 9 p.m. Saturday and 6 a.m. Sunday. It had some damage to the front edge of one wing.
 
SteveC said:
What I want to know is; how should he log it?

Take the total time in his logbook, enter the flight as a negative of total time, totaling ZERO in the logbook. Go to jail, directly to jail.
 
I'm guesssing it was a job interview for a S. American drug running company. I'd say he probably passed the "ride" portion of the interview. That would be a tough checkride...steal the jet...fly late at night...under radar...

Can you prepare for that? Or is it like the SAT where you just take it with no prep?
 
ComplexHiAv8r said:
Take the total time in his logbook, enter the flight as a negative of total time, totaling ZERO in the logbook. Go to jail, directly to jail.
do not pass go....do not collect $200....and throw away the key...
 
Since evil doers might be lurking I'll refrain from going on a tirade about the "security and securing" of business class aircraft and simply say that it doesn't surprise me that he was able to get in the Citation.

What does surprise me is that he didn't kill himself! God does protect retards...
 
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