CBS/AP/ June 1, 2011, 10:38 AM

FAA to fine people who point lasers at planes

WASHINGTON - Federal aviation officials say they will start imposing fines against people who point powerful lasers at planes and helicopters, which can temporarily blind pilots.

The Federal Aviation Administration said Wednesday that pilots have reported over 1,100 such incidents in the U.S. so far this year.

Agency officials released a new legal interpretation they said will allow them to fine people who point the lasers as much as $11,000 per incident.

The incidents have increased rapidly around the world over the past six years as online sales of new, powerful handheld lasers have soared. The lasers are marketed as a tool to point out stars at night.

Video: Lasers Pointers A Big Threat to Planes

CBS News transportation safety analyst Mark Rosenker, a former chair of the NTSB, said lasers pointed into cockpits is a serious problem.

"You can immediately distract the pilot," Rosenker said. "You can scare the pilot. And in worst cases you can temporarily blind the pilot as he's taking off or approaching landing."

Rosenker said the problem goes beyond aircraft.

"People are pointing these at truck drivers. They're pointing them at bus drivers. They're pointing them at automobile drivers," he said. "This is a ridiculous kind of behavior and it needs to be stopped and stopped quickly."

According to an FAA press release:

This year, pilots have reported more than 1,100 incidents nationwide of lasers being pointed at aircraft. Laser event reports have steadily increased since the FAA created a formal reporting system in 2005 to collect information from pilots. Reports rose from nearly 300 in 2005 to 1,527 in 2009 and 2,836 in 2010.

In 2010, Los Angeles International Airport recorded the highest number of laser events in the country for an individual airport with 102 reports, and the greater Los Angeles area tallied nearly twice that number, with 201 reports. Chicago O'Hare International Airport was a close second, with 98 reports, and Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport and Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport tied for the third highest number of laser events for the year with 80 each.

So far this year, the Phoenix and Dallas-Fort Worth areas each have recorded more than 45 laser events. The Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Houston areas each have recorded more than 30 laser events.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
8 Comments Add a Comment
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mask2697 says:
if you point a laser pointer at a plane even without getting fined it still makes you a prick
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PatDaddy67 says:
Well, let's see here. If there is a law being broken I should think that the FAA would have to arrest you, charge you in federal court and be successful in proving that you were in fact the person who pointed the laser at the plane. That may be hard to do. I'd fight it, fight it, fight it to the end.
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Void-Master replies:
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Without photographic evidence or something equally compelling, it should be pretty much impossible to do.
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magnumdr says:
LMAO!
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bobnjersey says:
[The lasers are marketed as a tool to point out stars at night.]
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sounds like the planes should stop getting in between the stars and the laser owners. what's the fine for the pilots doing this?
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myopinionpal says:
How would the FAA find out the exact location the laser came from in order to fine someone.
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Void-Master replies:
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As with tracer rounds, laser pointers point in both directions.
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m0u5y says:
I wonder how they're going to handle a 4 year old pointing it at a plane because they saw it plastered all over the internet?
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