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FBI Offers $10,000 Reward in Campaign Against Pointing Lasers at Aircraft

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The FBI announced Tuesday a national campaign to deter people from pointing lasers at aircrafts, a federal violation that presents danger to pilots, passengers and those on the ground. The FBI is offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information that leads to the arrest of any individual who aims a laser at an aircraft. The reward is available for 90 days in all 56 FBI field offices throughout the country. In Ocean City, Council passed an ordinance in 2011 that prohibits the possession or sale of any laser pointer that exceeds one milliwatt in output power. The measure came after a man was arrested that summer for pointing a laser at a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter and boat on a night training mission. Ocean City police took a radio call from the boat two miles offshore and were able to arrest the man while he was still beaming his laser from the Ocean City Boardwalk. But reports from the Federal Aviation Administration tied eight other incidents of aircraft harassment to Ocean City in 2010. City Council also reacted to reports of laser pointers being directed at motorists driving cars, visitors riding Ferris wheels and even people sitting in their homes. In 2005, the FBI partnered with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to address the increasing problem of laser strikes on airplanes. The problem was growing across the country, as more powerful lasers became easier to purchase. From 2005 through 2013, the deliberate targeting of aircrafts by handheld lasers increased by more than 1,100 percent. These incidents often result in pilots experiencing temporary blindness, which can force them to divert or make emergency landings. This dramatic increase in reported laser strikes prompted the FBI to create a pilot program aimed at raising awareness on the dangers of pointing a laser at an aircraft, and the offering of a monetary reward for information that leads to an arrest. Twelve FBI field offices throughout the country participated in this media campaign. Since the launch of the pilot program on February 11, 2014, the major metropolitan areas of the 12 FBI offices participating in this program have seen a 19 percent decrease in the number of reported incidents. Laser incidents on aircrafts arriving and departing from Newark Liberty Airport have increased 14 percent over the past year. “Although our previous efforts to raise public awareness have shown early signs of success in reducing the number of laser attacks in those 12 cities, the laser threat remains a problem on a much larger scale,” said Joseph Campbell, Assistant Director of the FBI’s Criminal Investigative Division. “We hope to build on our success through this national campaign in an effort to reduce the overall threat.” The FBI is partnering with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the Air Line Pilots Association International, federal, state and local law enforcement, international law enforcement, school resource officers and other stakeholders in its efforts to continue to educate the public about the dangers associated with laser strikes to aircraft.  Campaign outreach efforts include digital billboards, radio public service announcements, video, social media, a presence on www.fbi.gov
and partner websites and more. “I can’t stress enough how dangerous and irresponsible it is to point a laser at an aircraft,” said FAA Administrator Michael Huerta. “We know that targeted enforcement has succeeded in driving down laser incidents in a number of cities, and we’ll continue to partner with law enforcement to address this problem nationwide.” “Intentionally aiming a laser at an aircraft poses a serious threat to those in the air and on the ground – and it’s a serious crime with serious consequences”, said Air Line Pilots Association, International President, Captain Lee Moak.  “The Laser Threat Awareness Campaign has resulted in an overall reduction of incidents, and we look forward to continuing to work with the FBI to bring the reach of these efforts.” Thousands of laser attacks go unreported every year, including strikes against law enforcement aircrafts, media helicopters, military aircrafts, medical evacuation and search and rescue aircrafts, as well as foreign air carriers. If you have information about a lasing incident, or see someone pointing a laser at an aircraft, call your local FBI field office or dial 911. Newark Special Agent in Charge Aaron T. Ford would like to thank the Federal Air Marshal Service, the New Jersey State Police, the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office, the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, the Cape May County Prosecutor’s Office, Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office, Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office, Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office, and the Union County Prosecutor’s Office, and the Ocean City New Jersey Police Department for their significant contributions to this public awareness campaign. For more information: http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2014/february/protecting-aircraft-from-lasers — News release from the FBI
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