New York Post

5,000 ‘RISKY’ PILOTS

Hidden health ills

- By RONNY REYES

Nearly 5,000 pilots licensed to operate in the US were investigat­ed for allegedly falsifying medical records to hide conditions that could deem them unfit to fly, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion said.

The pilots, all military veterans, are accused of knowingly concealing serious health conditions or mental-health disorders to the FAA, even as they reported them to other officials to collect disability benefits, The Washington Post reported.

The irregulari­ties were first discovered more than two years ago, with about 4,800 pilots investigat­ed so far, and half of those cases closed, FAA spokesman Matthew Lehner said. Of those cases, about 60 pilots “posed a clear danger to aviation safety” and were ordered to cease flying while their records were under review, Lehner added.

As for the rest whose cases are still open, “the vast majority of these pilots may continue to operate safely while we complete the reconcilia­tion process,” Lehner said.

Of the pilots under investigat­ion, about 600 are licensed to fly passenger airlines, with the rest holding commercial licenses that allow their hiring by cargo firms and other companies, a senior US official speaking on the condition of anonymity told the outlet.

The revelation has exposed a long-criticized method in which the FAA’s medical system screens pilots while often relying on aviators to self-report their conditions.

Experts say this method encourages vets to conceal their conditions from the FAA so they’ll be able to work, while often exaggerati­ng the conditions to Veterans Affairs to bolster disability payments and coverage.

“There are people out there who I think are trying to play both sides of the game,” Jerome Limoge, an aviation medical examiner in Colorado Springs told the outlet. “They’re being encouraged by VA to claim everything. Some of it is almost stolen valor.”

The FAA also learned some of its own contracted physicians advised pilots to conceal their conditions, officials said.

The FAA’s Office of Aerospace Medicine has allocated $3.6 million to hire new medical experts and staff to reexamine certificat­ion records for the pilots under investigat­ion.

The FAA did not respond to The Post’s request for additional informatio­n.

Although the cases of fraudulent reporting have been known to exist for more than two decades, scrutiny was renewed around the world after Germanwing­s co-pilot Andreas Lubitz crashed a passenger plane into the French Alps in 2015. An investigat­ion found he had been treated for suicidal tendencies and depression, but hid the condition from his employer.

By 2019, investigat­ors finally had the means to compare FAA data with VA records, with VA Inspector General Michael Missal’s office alerting officials to the cases. Missal’s office is investigat­ing if any of the pilots should be charged with defrauding the VA.

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