Quote:
Originally Posted by herr_oberst
I have a question.
In the event something like this happens and the pilot is in over his or her head, but he or she manages to land safely, will the FAA take any disciplinary action, or make restrictions on his or her license?
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It's hard to say what the FAA would do. Years ago, a "pilot deviation" would result in a request for you to call the tower (or visit the tower) and get a tongue lashing from the chief controller on duty. A few years ago, the FAA changed that policy to "mandatory occurrence reporting". Now ATC (the tower) is supposed to file a report on any pilot deviation, and you can expect a phone call from an Operations Inspector from the FAA.
Depending upon what you did, and what plausible excuse you can muster up, you could get a stern talking-to, a letter in your 'permanent file', a temporary suspension of your license, or even a permanent revocation of your license.
Probably one of the likely options, somewhere between the letter in your file and the permanent revocation, is what they call a 709 ride. This is an FAA order for you to take a "check ride" with an FAA inspector. Based on the outcome, you could go on your way or you could be suspended while you take remedial training.
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