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Pilot's License Revoked After Alleged Drunken Flight

Initial BAT: .13 Percent

John V. Salamone won't be flying himself around for awhile. The FAA, ruling that he endangered his life and the lives of others, revoked his license after he allegedly flew his 1967 Cherokee Six (file photo of type, below) while drunk last week.

Salamone, 44, couldn't be reached for comment.

Authorities say a preliminary breath test rang up .13 percent -- the amount of alcohol in his bloodstream. The legal limit for flying is .04 percent, while the legal limit for driving in Pennsylvania is .08 percent.

The FAA ordered Salamone to either mail in his flight certificate or deliver it to the office in Jamaica (NY). All this, after Salamone's flight of January 15th, when officials say he penetrated Philidelphia Class B airspace without permission.

The Cherokee's course, as described by ATC, was a wild one. A controller reported seeing the radar return about 15 miles northwest of Philadelphia International Airport, flying toward town. After allegedly penetration Class B Airspace, FAA Spokesman Jim Peters said Salamone wandered toward Atlantic City (NJ) and Ocean City (MD) before making what looked like an approach at a smaller airport south of Philadelphia. ATC reportedly cleared Salamone to land -- in the blind, because he wasn't responding to radio calls.

But instead, Salamone headed for home -- Pottstown-Limerick Airport. But the saga didn't end there. Authorities say he tried to fly over a nuclear power plant before being intercepted by a police helicopter and forced to land.

The FAA says Salamone doesn't have any record of FAR violations or accidents. It's not clear at this point whether he'll face criminal charges for the joyride. Authorities in Pennsylvania say their laws are made to address drunk drivers, not drunk pilots.

FMI: www.faa.gov

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