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View Full Version : EAA Officer & Homebuilder Makes the Local Paper


October 28th 05, 04:10 AM
Thursday, October 27, 2005 12:11 PM CDT
Arrest made in stripped airplane
By JEFF REINITZ, Courier Staff Writer
WATERLOO --- A Clear Lake businessman parked one of his planes at
Waterloo Airport airport after it developed engine problems about five
years ago.

And sometime later, he discovered the aircraft had been stripped of
tens of thousands of dollars of parts.

"It's just sitting there on the ground ... flat on its belly," said
Jerry Dwyer, 75-year-old former overseer of the Mason City Airport who
has been flying since age 13 and now runs an aircraft sales company and
air charter and freight businesses.

The twin-engine 1973 Piper Seneca now sits behind a building at the
Waterloo Airport with missing motors and wooden pallets where the
landing gear used to be.

Capt. Bruce Arends of the Waterloo Police Department said a rural Cedar
Falls man was the one who removed the parts --- which include the
aforementioned engine and landing gear as well as an instrument panel,
autopilot and seats --- to use them on an airplane he was building
himself.

Police arrested John M. Nocero, 48, of 2989 Jepsen Road, Tuesday for
first-degree theft.

Nocero, who was listed as an officer with the local chapter of the
Experimental Aircraft Association, couldn't be reached for comment
Tuesday.

....

Arends said Nocero took the parts to a workshop area at his Cedar Falls
home and intended to use them to build his own airplane.

....

Nocero told police he took the gear, records state.

Nocero was booked at the Black Hawk County Jail and let out a few hours
later on pre-trial release.

First-degree theft is a Class C felony punishable by up to 10 years in
prison.

source:
http://www.wcfcourier.com/articles/2005/10/27/news/metro/84406ac5b4515014862570a7004f7a67.txt

mah
October 28th 05, 10:44 AM
wrote:
>
> Thursday, October 27, 2005 12:11 PM CDT
> Arrest made in stripped airplane
> By JEFF REINITZ, Courier Staff Writer
> WATERLOO --- A Clear Lake businessman parked one of his planes at
> Waterloo Airport airport after it developed engine problems about five
> years ago.
>
If my foggy memory is right, that airplane has been sitting for more
than 5 years. I used to work at the FBO that rented the hanger space
for that plane. I left in 1998.

MAH

stol
October 28th 05, 02:34 PM
mah wrote:
> wrote:
> >
> > Thursday, October 27, 2005 12:11 PM CDT
> > Arrest made in stripped airplane
> > By JEFF REINITZ, Courier Staff Writer
> > WATERLOO --- A Clear Lake businessman parked one of his planes at
> > Waterloo Airport airport after it developed engine problems about five
> > years ago.
> >
> If my foggy memory is right, that airplane has been sitting for more
> than 5 years. I used to work at the FBO that rented the hanger space
> for that plane. I left in 1998.
>
> MAH

And that makes it OK to rip the guys plane off ????????????????????

mah
October 28th 05, 06:12 PM
stol wrote:
>
> mah wrote:
> > If my foggy memory is right, that airplane has been sitting for more
> > than 5 years. I used to work at the FBO that rented the hanger space
> > for that plane. I left in 1998.
> >
> > MAH
>
> And that makes it OK to rip the guys plane off ????????????????????

I'm not condoning the theft. Just pointing out the story might not be
totally accurate.

MAH

October 30th 05, 02:00 AM
Richard Riley wrote:
> On 27 Oct 2005 20:10:08 -0700, wrote:
>
> :The twin-engine 1973 Piper Seneca now sits behind a building at the
> :Waterloo Airport with missing motors and wooden pallets where the
> :landing gear used to be.
>
> OK, I can understand why a homebuilder would want instruments and a
> Lyc 360. I can even understand why he'd want a spare engine. What
> the @$#* did he think he was going to do with the Seneca landing gear?
>
> (Hope he rots.)

Ah. One inebriated skumbag scowling and wagging his finger at
another.
***

Richard Riley" > wrote in message


...

"And, the thought occurs that anyone who'd buy and (sic) airplane from
Larry
SHOULD be removed from the gene pool, so maybe it's a good thing."

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