When is criminal law necessary for aviation safety?
When the FAA enforcement process fails to stop or prevent the continuing of an unsafe act or operation. However, based on a previous thread’s discussion it appears some background info is required.
There are 2 levels of aviation enforcement: the FAA Enforcement level and the Federal Criminal Aviation level. And any aviation attorney worth their salt will always recommend to never cross the red line that separates them.
An example perhaps. Capt. Bubba is a commercial pilot who offers for-hire services with his aircraft. After several years, times get tough, so he decides to cut costs. He elects to forgo his required maintenance inspections, and instead forges those inspection entries with various mechanics names/numbers.
A year later, Bubba has a minor incident and during the FAA investigation it is determined the aircraft has no valid 100 hour or annual inspection, so he receives an FAA LOI.
In the following weeks/months, the FAA enforcement process moves through the steps and subsequent appeals from the FSDO up to a full board appeal, but Bubba loses and has his pilot certificate revoked and his aircraft’s AWC is pulled. At this point the FAA is done. No further FAA enforcement action is possible.
However, Bubba decides to move to a different state, buy another aircraft, and set up for-hire ops again. 6 months go by. Then Bubba gets ramp checked. And during this new FAA investigation, it is discovered Bubba has no valid certificate or medical. Except now he himself… not the FAA… has crossed the dreaded red line to the Federal Criminal Aviation level. All’s the FAA is permitted to do is refer the investigation to the DOT OIG and they are basically done with the matter.
So without the criminal aviation side, with its stricter penalties and punishments, Bubba could potentially operate forever or at least until he killed someone or himself. Unfortunately, there are a number of “Bubbas” out there who have actually killed people and a larger number who haven’t been caught yet.
Regardless, to put the federal criminal aviation side into perspective, only about 17 cases out of the 1000s of FAA violations issued in 2023 made it to the federal criminal level. So the “hypothesis” from other threads that somehow an FAA enforcement action can directly end with armed intervention or the threat of, is simply not true. Plus it also takes the individual (Bubba) to make a conscious decision to engage in that criminal activity even after the FAA is done.