FBI subpoenas records from JWA flight schools
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Deepa Bharath
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -- Investigators have asked most, if not all,
flight schools that operate out of John Wayne Airport to hand over flight
instruction records from the last five years.
The schools were subpoenaed over the weekend by FBI officials who are
conducting a harrowing investigation, sifting through thousands of leads
following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon. Flight schools from across the country were subpoenaed as
part of the work.
According to officials, some of the suspected terrorists who
reportedly hijacked the United and American Airlines flights and went on
the rampage took courses at flight training schools in Florida.
There have been no arrests involving anyone from the JWA schools.
Operators of local schools said Thursday that only a small percentage
of their students are foreign nationals.
“Maybe 0.001% out of several hundred students are from other
countries,” said Gary Sequeira, owner of Orange County Flight Center.
But, Sequeira added, he intends to be more vigilant while admitting
foreign nationals into his school.
“We will definitely scrutinize more on [the students’] background in
the future,” he said.
Even if the government does not require background checks, Sequeira
said he might start checking out prospective students for the benefit of
the school.
But representatives from other schools said they will not discriminate
against foreign nationals simply because of last week’s terrorist
attacks.
“I don’t discriminate in the way we provide services,” said Michael
Church, manager and president of Sunrise Aviation.
“These were criminals with a criminal intent,” he said of the
suspected terrorists. “It happened not because they learned to fly but
because they outsmarted airport security measures.”
Church said he does not plan on running background checks unless the
government requires them in the future.
“What is a background check anyway?” Church asked. “Generally
companies check with the DMV and do a criminal check. In these cases
those kinds of checks wouldn’t help anyway.”
Most foreign students who take flight training at Lenair Aviation have
an M1 visa, which is a student visa authorized by the Immigration and
Naturalization Service for vocational training, said manager Nicholas
Valera.
“If our government thinks it’s OK for these people to get visas, what
more checks can we do?” he said. “What checks are we going to do that the
government could not do?”
Valera said out of 100 students currently enrolled in his school, only
three are foreign nationals.
Many of these schools have been running losses because their planes
were grounded after the attacks. However, most of the restrictions were
lifted Thursday, Sequeira said.
“We’re gradually getting back to normal,” he said. “We have been hurt
over the last week and a half. But I’m optimistic about the future.”
However, not everything will be the same again. Some restrictions
still remain in terms of where, when and how students can train, Sequeira
said. Earlier they could go to any random location and train, but now
they are required to train along specified routes.
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