Bidens Evacuate Beach House After Small Plane's Flyover

Pilot made a mistake, Secret Service says
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jun 4, 2022 2:50 PM CDT
Bidens Evacuate Beach House After Small Plane's Breach
President Biden walks down the steps of Air Force One at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware on Thursday on his way to Rehobeth Beach for the weekend.   (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

A small private airplane mistakenly entered restricted airspace near President Biden's Delaware vacation home Saturday, prompting the brief evacuation of the president and first lady, the White House and the Secret Service said. The White House said that there was no threat to the Bidens and that precautionary measures were taken. After the situation was assessed, Biden and his wife, Jill, returned to their Rehoboth Beach home, the AP reports. The Secret Service said in a statement that the plane was immediately escorted from the restricted airspace.

The Secret Service said in a statement that it would interview the pilot who, according to a preliminary investigation, was not on the proper radio channel and was not following published flight guidance. As is standard practice for presidential trips outside Washington, the Federal Aviation Administration published flight restrictions earlier this week before Biden's beach town visit. The restrictions include a 10-mile radius no-fly zone contained with a 30-mile restricted zone. The statement said the pilot had "mistakenly" entered a secured area.

A CBS News reporter said on Twitter that he saw Biden motorcading to a Rehoboth Beach fire station. The group of reporters that travels with the president was not part of the motorcade. Although federal regulations require pilots to check for flight restrictions along their route before taking off, accidental airspace breaches, particularly around temporary restricted zones, are common. Military jets and Coast Guard helicopters are often used to intercept any planes that violate the flight restrictions around the president. Intercepted planes are diverted to a nearby airfield, where aircrews are interviewed by law enforcement and face potential criminal or civil penalties. (There was a similar scare at the US Capitol in April.)

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