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Tampa Police Suspend Pilot For Borrowing the Helicopter 8

Usually a boss won't care if his employee takes a company vehicle to run a few errands, but when that vehicle is a helicopter it's a different story. 32-year-old Dave Dennison is accused of taking a police helicopter to drop off a fishing net to a friend last fall. Tampa officials have suspended him for five days without pay following an internal affairs investigation. I wonder if Dave was at least smart enough to fill the tank when he was done?

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Tampa Police Suspend Pilot For Borrowing the Helicopter

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  • I borrowed a helicopter to pick up some 'za once. I didn't pilot it though. It was in Iraq and I hadn't had pizza for months - so worth it.
  • Mountain rescue helicopter is seen hovering at length above a biker going slowly up a mountain pass. After inquiries were made, it happened that the pilots had spotted one of their own as the biker, so they flew close by. The biker had his radio with him, so they chatted: "how is it going?", "Fine, but it's too hot", so they decided to fan him for a while... True story.
    • I think I'd need to see a link for that one. Mountain rescue helicopters are prepped for an emergency, they don't typically do routine patrols. They get a call, they take off, they go. They don't circle around in case the point of rescue is too far for the fuel that they've already used.

      At least, thats how it works here.

      • Mountain rescue helicopters need training time too. Proper training sometimes means doing things aimlessly and relaxedly trying different things as they occur to you. Any rules against trying things will limit that. Sometimes sensibly (e.g. a rule against flying within a couple of meters during training - it's needed in real life, but it's very dangerous to practice properly) but practicing hovering at the right height to create a wind sounds exactly the right thing for mountain rescue pilots to do. Get
  • Got nothing on Albuquerque cops. They took the chopper to Krispy Kreme to buy donuts [metro.co.uk].

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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