He was just about to let me go and then said..."what a minute!" Gulp!
This is why you should be very careful speaking with an Inspector when they want to talk to you about an incident/accident, whether you are involved or not. The phone call is a fishing expidition. Even if your'e guilty as charged and you know they know it, why give them more information to hang you for that incident. Worse yet, why give them an opportunity to blind side you with a second or different violation. That is exactly what this phone call is for, (ie. how many hours had you been on duty, how many hours have you instructed in the last 24hrs etc.). You are already flustered because you are talking to someone who has your livelihood in his/her hands. The FAA knows this, and unless you are able to think fast on your feet under a stressful situation, you just may let the cat out of the bag and get hung for a totaly different violation.
He explained I would be getting a letter of investigation. When I received it, write up a reponse explaining everything just as I had just did, and then he would take it from there.
Thank you Mr. pilot for that useful information, I'm going to send a Letter of Investigation. It would be most helpful if you respond in writing your own words, within 10 days so that I can hang you with your own words. Once the Inspector sends that letter of investigation, the FAA regional office gets involved.
The Inspector is nothing more than a detective gathering evidence for the the DA (FAA Regional Attorney). The FAA attorney is the one who will make the decission to persue the violation and will be the one twisting your own words against you. The inspector may be able to influence the attorney as to what should happen to you, but I sure wouldn't bet on it. It's not uncommon for the Inspector to tell you to cooperate and he will do whatever he can to make this go away or lessen the penalty. Thats just a classic move to make you spill the beans on yourself.