FAA Has Lost Track Of 119,000 Airplanes

Airplanes are not small, and although it might be easy to hide one or two, 119,000? AP reports:

The Federal Aviation Administration is missing key information on who owns one-third of the 357,000 private and commercial aircraft in the U.S. — a gap the agency fears could be exploited by terrorists and drug traffickers.

The records are in such disarray that the FAA says it is worried that criminals could buy planes without the government’s knowledge, or use the registration numbers of other aircraft to evade new computer systems designed to track suspicious flights. It has ordered all aircraft owners to re-register their planes in an effort to clean up its files.

About 119,000 of the aircraft on the U.S. registry have “questionable registration” because of missing forms, invalid addresses, unreported sales or other paperwork problems, according to the FAA. In many cases, the FAA cannot say who owns a plane or even whether it is still flying or has been junked.

Already there have been cases of drug traffickers using phony U.S. registration numbers, as well as instances of mistaken identity in which police raided the wrong plane because of faulty record-keeping…

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  • Ernst Gruengast

    ” – a gap the agency fears could be exploited by terrorists and drug traffickers.”
    Could be? The words “tip” and “iceberg” spring immediately to mind.
    See “Daniel Hopsicker investigates” @ http://www.madcowprod.com/

  • Ernst Gruengast

    ” – a gap the agency fears could be exploited by terrorists and drug traffickers.”
    Could be? The words “tip” and “iceberg” spring immediately to mind.
    See “Daniel Hopsicker investigates” @ http://www.madcowprod.com/

  • http://voxmagi-necessarywords.blogspot.com/ VoxMagi

    I see that project getting nowhere once the CIA and other power players get tired of being pestered for identification on their planes. It would be nice if ti were a serious effort though.

  • http://voxmagi-necessarywords.blogspot.com/ VoxMagi

    I see that project getting nowhere once the CIA and other power players get tired of being pestered for identification on their planes. It would be nice if ti were a serious effort though.

  • Shaggz1297

    Um, only real fault in the story: Im pretty sure its drug trafficers with those planes cause it’s obvious that the terrorist fly United Airlines due to the sky miles!!

  • Shaggz1297

    Um, only real fault in the story: Im pretty sure its drug trafficers with those planes cause it’s obvious that the terrorist fly United Airlines due to the sky miles!!

  • Anti_fascist_freedom_fighter

    The CIA IS the terrorists, and IS the Drug traffickers…. call the CIA and ask them about those 119,000 planes.

  • Anti_fascist_freedom_fighter

    The CIA IS the terrorists, and IS the Drug traffickers…. call the CIA and ask them about those 119,000 planes.

  • http://blog.hyland.com kmaurer

    Glad the FAA is owning up to the mistake and revamping its record keeping policies. But why was the record keeping so bad in the first place?

    Records management/enterprise content management software isn’t exactly new technology. Hopefully the FAA will take a lesson from the majority of corporate accounts payable departments which already use the software successfully – and have been for years. Here’s a cool blog post about how the FAA should be thinking about records management: http://blog.hyland.com/government/faa-loses-119000-planes-a-lesson-in-records-management-and-ecm/

  • http://blog.hyland.com kmaurer

    Glad the FAA is owning up to the mistake and revamping its record keeping policies. But why was the record keeping so bad in the first place?

    Records management/enterprise content management software isn’t exactly new technology. Hopefully the FAA will take a lesson from the majority of corporate accounts payable departments which already use the software successfully – and have been for years. Here’s a cool blog post about how the FAA should be thinking about records management: http://blog.hyland.com/government/faa-loses-119000-planes-a-lesson-in-records-management-and-ecm/