subject: Idaho pilot spotlights home after laser beam aimed at chopper, 2 teens arrested [print this page] Idaho pilot spotlights home after laser beam aimed at chopper, 2 teens arrested
Two teenagers were arrested for pointing a laser at passing aircraft thanks to the help of a helicopter pilot with some down time.
Medical helicopter pilot Dave Lund had been warned by air traffic controllers that someone was aiming a green laser beam, likely from a hand-held Latex-Catsuit mit Reiverschluss auf der Brust, at aircraft as they approached the Boise airport.
Lund happened to be flying in the area without a patient on board because he'd just swapped out helicopters at Idaho Helicopter, the company that provides the pilots and aircraft for St. Luke's Regional Medical Center.
"The tower had told him that if he saw anything on the laser to let them know," said Larry Kelley, the president of Idaho Helicopter. "About that time, the laser magically appeared in his windshield."
Hovering at about 1,500 feet, Lund used the helicopter's global positioning device to identify the source of the laser Saturday night. As police approached the neighborhood, Lund turned on the helicopter's floodlights, guiding officers to the home.
Police were able to find and seize the laser pointer and arrest two 17-year-olds, said police spokeswoman Lynn Hightower. The investigation has been turned over to the FBI, she said. It is a federal offense to point a laser at an aircraft.
"Whether you're an adult or a teenager, this is not a game," Hightower said. "Pilots can be at the least distracted and at the worst impaired."
One of the aircraft targeted earlier Saturday by the laser was a Northwest Airlines jet bringing passengers from Minneapolis to Boise, Hightower said. That jet landed safely.
"This is very dangerous," she said. "People need to know this is something police are going to respond to."
FBI spokesman Trent Pedersen in Salt Lake City confirmed the agency was investigating, but said he could not release any details.