Swede who flew jet with no license gets light fine

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OUDE MEER, Netherlands (AP) — A Swedish man who flew passenger jets in countries around Europe for more than a decade without a license was let off with a light fine by a Dutch court on Tuesday. A prosecutor paid tribute in court to his flying skills.

The court convicted Thomas Salme, 41, of flying without a license and fined him 2,000 euros ($2,700), about a third of the maximum penalty.

Presiding Judge Mathieu Kronenberg rejected prosecution demands for a suspended three-month jail sentence and a larger fine on forgery charges, saying the charge wasn't worded right.

Prosecutor Bote ter Steege said the case was unprecedented in the Netherlands, but also praised Salme's piloting ability.

"You'd think you could say that (Salme) endangered air traffic all those years, but the fact is that he flew for 13 years without any incidents."

Salme lives in Milan and did not show up for his hearing because he feared the media attention, his lawyer Martha Muntjewerf explained to the judge.

Acting on a tip from Swedish authorities, police arrested Salme at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport in March in the cockpit of a Corendon Airlines Boeing 737 shortly before it was to depart from Amsterdam for Ankara, Turkey, carrying 101 passengers.

According to police, Salme became visibly nervous when officers asked for his license and tried to show them a different document. Then he asked to depart the plane quickly in order to minimize the disturbance.

On the loading bridge he stripped the wings off his uniform and confessed to police his license was fake. It was based on an outdated Swedish license and contained several spelling errors, Ter Steege said.

He said the airline industry operates on a basis of trust about pilots' licenses on a day-to-day basis.

Prosecution spokeswoman Natasja Keijzer said the justice ministry will carefully weigh whether to appeal, calling Tuesday's verdict "unsatisfactory for the people who were on the plane."

Ter Steege said Salme appeared to be a good pilot, passing simulator tests with high marks and once landing a plane with only one engine after striking a bird.

He did not give details of that incident.

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