Mechanic Charged With Falsifying FAA Credentials

 If you've had any work done by "The Plane Man" in Casa Grande, Ariz., you 
might want to have it checked by an A&P before your next flight. A federal 
grand jury has charged Glen Forsyth, 43, with five felony offenses resulting 
from a 100-hour inspection on an Alon Ercoupe in July of 2008. A week after the 
annual, the engine failed and the aircraft was written off in the off-airport 
landing that followed. LawFuel.com reported the post-accident inspection 
"caused FAA aircraft safety inspectors to believe that the fuel pump had not 
been properly inspected."



So, naturally they asked to talk to Forsyth and discovered that he was signing 
off airplanes with a number issued to another man in 1968. It's not that 
Forsyth is completely untrained, but he's failed the FAA exams three times and 
the agency is alleging he didn't take the hint and find another line of work. 
Forsyth has been charged with three counts of making false statements to a 
government agency and two counts of fraud involving airplane parts. Each charge 
carries a maximum penalty of five years in jail and a fine of $250,000.

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