Private Pilot Nearly Shot Down for Violating 'Secret
No-Fly Zone'
by
William Norman Grigg
Recently by William Norman Grigg: Lights,
Camera, Entrapment! Homeland Security Theater in Portland
Last July,
the
Small Wars Journal published an essay co-written by retired
U.S. Army Colonel Kevin Benson entitled Full Spectrum Operations
in the Homeland: A Vision of the Future. That
article presented a speculative case study of domestic military
operations to put down a domestic insurrection that would seize
control of the unremarkable town of Darlington, South Carolina.
In the scenario
painted by Col. Benson and his co-author, Professor Jennifer Weber
of the University of Kansas, a militia inspired by the Tea Party
movement seized control of Darlingtons municipal government,
erects checkpoints on major transportation lines, and
imposes a form of martial law in which citizens who complain
are immediately detained. The governor of South Carolina invokes
the Insurrection Act, leading to a full-spectrum response
by the U.S. military.
Shortly after
that essay was published, 70-year-old private pilot Robin Fleming
learned that Darlington County or at least the airspace above
it is already subject to a form of martial law.
Fleming,
who belongs to the Bermuda
High Soaring aviation club in Lancaster, South Carolina, went
for an afternoon glider flight last July in Darlington County. His
course briefly took him over the HB Robinson Nuclear Generating
Station near Lake Robinson. As he was preparing to return to Lancaster,
Fleming lost radio contact with the other members of the club. Hours
passed as his friends imagined the worst. Finally they filed a missing
aircraft report, and a search began. To their relief, Fleming contacted
them only to leave them horrified when they learned what
had happened.
After Fleming
passed over the power plant, he was ordered to land his glider,
which he did as soon as prevailing wind currents permitted. Once
he was down on the ground, Fleming was swarmed by law enforcement.
Fleming
was informed that he had violated a secret no-fly zone.
This was an entirely spurious claim: There is no such thing as a
domestic "no-fly zone," secret or otherwise. That term,
significantly, is used to describe aerial blockades imposed by the
military generally under the purported authority of a multilateral
body, such as the UN or one of its regional affiliates against
a "rogue nation," such as Iraq or Libya. The Homeland
Security Department apparently considers itself entitled to impose
similar restrictions wherever it chooses, and do so without bothering
to inform civilian pilots or make suitable notations on FAA-produced
sectional aviation charts.
Despite
the fact that he had done nothing wrong, Fleming was handcuffed,
charged with breach of peace, and held for more than
24 hours before being interrogated by FBI and Homeland Security
officials. The charges were dismissed after he showed the investigators
that the zone wasnt marked in aviation charts but he
was required to sign a document promising that he wouldnt
file a lawsuit against the officials who had illegally detained
him. He later learned that local police officials had made preparations
to shoot down his glider if he hadnt landed as quickly as
he did.
Fleming did
nothing illegal yet he was brutalized by people who had been
prepared to kill him, and could have done so without consequences.
Such is life in our Homeland Security State.
January
16, 2013
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
publishes the Pro
Libertate blog and hosts the Pro
Libertate radio program.
Copyright
© 2013 William Norman Grigg
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