Anyone know what the status is of the regents' audit on Leath's use of the ISU planes?Flying to NC for 40 minutes... Wow
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Anyone know what the status is of the regents' audit on Leath's use of the ISU planes?Flying to NC for 40 minutes... Wow
Anyone know what the status is of the regents' audit on Leath's use of the ISU planes?
Pending until people stop asking.
So does he need a different license to fly each plane, or does his license cover both planes and whats the penalty for not being licensed to fly a plane?
So are hard landings common or is he just a crappy pilot?
Starting to think he is incapable of performing a cross wind landing. Too bad cause they are freaking fun.
Starting to think he is incapable of performing a cross wind landing. Too bad cause they are freaking fun.
Not sure how his wife flies with him unless she just medicates herself first.
If you say so. This is why I hate flying (passenger, of course).
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And depending on the timing the Rat may decide to slide Braindead into that seat at ISU and of course Kimmy moves into Terrace Hill.You've been away from Iowa for too long. This is exactly the type of behavior the board of regents excuses. Rastetter is a rat and he hired leath.
And depending on the timing the Rat may decide to slide Braindead into that seat at ISU and of course Kimmy moves into Terrace Hill.
http://qctimes.com/news/national/ap...cle_4d5b6b60-74f8-5062-9ed8-3c04ec86a94e.html
Another hard landing found via records requests.
Documents obtained by The Associated Press under the open records law show that Leath was flying in gusty conditions on Aug. 11, 2014, and "landed hard" in a crosswind, causing propeller damage. A university spokeswoman declined to say where the incident occurred or whose plane Leath was flying.
The documents show that the university didn’t fully disclose information about either incident in its application for aviation insurance this year. It’s not clear whether this might affect the policy, which covers millions of dollars in liability and damage for both university planes. The policy, which cost $51,000 in premiums, contains a warning that it will be voided “if you have concealed or misrepresented any material fact.”
Learning about the 2014 incident “surprised us, as it was not reported to our office at the time it occurred,” Deb Cramer, an insurance coordinator at the university’s risk management office, wrote in a February 2015 email obtained by the AP.
After that policy expired in February, the university switched its carrier to Catlin Insurance.
The pilot history form signed by Leath asked him to disclose details of all prior accidents and incidents as a pilot, including dates, and warned that concealing material information was a fraudulent insurance act subject to criminal and civil penalties.
He listed the 2015 landing in Illinois, noting that it triggered a Federal Aviation Administration test ride that he passed. But he left off the 2014 incident.
The university also attested in the application that it had no “aviation losses” during the previous three years, even though the 2015 accident would have qualified and ISU had divulged the 2014 landing as a loss the previous year.