Boston Herald

Bay State fly guy fouls out with feds

East Brookfield man convicted of flying helicopter without license

- By Flint MCColgan

A light helicopter enthusiast — barred from flying by the feds back in 2000 after he stole one — has been flying a copter in and out of his backyard and just got convicted for it.

Specifical­ly, Antonio Santonasta­so, 62, of East Brookfield, is a fan of the Robinson R22 helicopter. It’s a small, single-engine two-seat light utility helicopter often used for training new pilots, according to the aircraft enthusiast website Flugzeugin­fo.net.

He helped steal one from the Norwood Memorial Airport in May 2000 and was convicted of the theft in Norfolk Superior Court that year. On Tuesday, a federal jury in Worcester convicted him on charges related to flying another R22 out of his backyard without a license at least 50 times between April 28 and Nov. 11, 2018.

He was convicted of one count of serving as an airman without an airman certificat­e, one count of making false statements to federal agents and one count of attempted witness tampering. Santonasta­so was indicted on the charges in May 2019. U.S. District Court Judge Timothy S. Hillman scheduled sentencing for Oct. 5.

Apparently, his neighbors weren’t big fans of a helicopter being operated in their neighborho­od.

One neighbor complained to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion that Santonasta­so was flying too close to a swing-set in his yard that his grandchild­ren used, according to court records. Another neighbor made a point to record Santonasta­so flying in and out of the yard and uploaded those videos to YouTube, according to the affidavit.

East Brookfield Police, following up on neighbor complaints, checked out Santonasta­so’s property in February 2018 and found him flying under the supervisio­n of his nephew, who had all the necessary licenses. But that one neighbor’s videos proved he often flew solo.

FAA investigat­ors, when they inspected in April of that year, found the backyard flightpath “extremely hazardous” as it was “lined tightly with trees, with only a few feet of clearance for the helicopter’s rotor blades.”

Santonasta­so, according to the court doc, showed inspectors upon their request a temporary airman certificat­e — dated 1985, years after its expiration date 120 days after being issued — and a medical certificat­e that the physician purported to have signed it told investigat­ors himself was a forgery.

 ?? Ap photo ?? ABUZZ: A Robinson R-22 helicopter, similar to those flown by Antonio Santonasta­so, is seen in flight.
Ap photo ABUZZ: A Robinson R-22 helicopter, similar to those flown by Antonio Santonasta­so, is seen in flight.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States