DesertFalcon
Member since 1999
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 286
ShyFlyGuy said:I work for a small 135 company and we got a base inspection Monday and it turns out that the numbers on the board were wrong and my medical was due March 1... I've had 26 duty-days without a current medical.
I fly night cargo and go to school full-time durring the day, plus my girlfriend killed herself 6 weeks ago, thus further distracting me. Things couldn't get worse... but wait, they do. She's the boss' daughter. I had a post in here at the beginning of the year, in case any of you remember that (about school vs. airlines). Now things couldn't get worse.
Any idea how the FAA will handle this?
(see further details below)
Send and email to this Aviation Law Attorney immediately. Don't say or do anything till you talk with him.
Phillip J. Kolczynski manages his own law firm in Irvine, California. He has a national practice, concentrating in aviation, product liability and business litigation in federal and state courts. Phil teaches evidence, product liability and aviation law at the Aviation Safety Program, School of Engineering, University Of Southern California. He chaired the 1990 ABA National Institute on Aviation Litigation in Washington, D.C., and has spoken nationally at numerous aviation litigation symposia.
Prior to moving to California in 1983, he was a trial attorney in the Aviation Unit, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., and the Litigation Division, Office of the Chief Counsel, Federal Aviation Administration, Washington, D.C. Phil graduated from Case Western Reserve School of Law, Cleveland, Ohio, in December, 1976, and attended college at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1969 where he held a Navy ROTC Full Scholarship. Before entering law school, he was a Marine Corps Captain and F-4 Phantom Pilot. He is a Commercial Pilot with instrument and multiengine ratings.
[email protected] AviationLawCorp.com
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