Man who landed gyrocopter at the US Capitol rejects deal

Author: Associated Press
Published:
Tampa Bay Times / MGN

WASHINGTON (AP) – A man who flew a gyrocopter through some of America’s most restricted airspace before landing at the U.S. Capitol said Monday that he’s rejected a plea offer in the case that would have involved several years in prison.

Douglas Hughes attended a status hearing Monday in federal court in Washington. He said in a brief telephone interview before the hearing that he had rejected an offer that included significant jail time because it didn’t seem just for an act of civil disobedience in which no one got hurt. Hughes has said his April 15 flight in the bare-bones aircraft was intended to call attention to the influence of big money in politics. Hughes says it’s now more likely that his case will go to trial.

Hughes says it’s now more likely that his case will go to trial. Another hearing was set for July 22.

At a hearing in April, Hughes pleaded not guilty to the six charges he faces and said he was open to the possibility of a plea deal. The charges he faces carry up to 9 ½ years in prison if he is convicted. Those include two felonies: operating as an airman without an airman’s certificate and violating aircraft registration requirements. Those charges carry a maximum of three years in prison. He also faces three misdemeanor offenses of violating national defense airspace, each carrying a maximum of one year in prison.

Hughes, who had been employed by the U.S. Postal Service and lives in Ruskin, Florida, also faces a misdemeanor charge of operating a vehicle falsely labeled as a postal carrier, a charge that carries a statutory maximum of six months in prison. The tail section of Hughes’ gyrocopter carried a Postal Service logo, and Hughes was carrying letters for each member of Congress.

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