Virginia

Virginia Woman Convicted of Shining Strobe Light at Navy Jet

The woman attached lights to a garden rake and pointed them overhead, NCIS says

VIRGINIA BEACH, VA – DECEMBER 19: Members of the VFA-81 “Sunliners” fly over the returning planes of VFA-34 “Blue Blasters” as they taxi into positiopn for parking after returning to Oceana Naval Air Station December 19, 2002 in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Members of VFA-83, along with VFA 81 “Sunliners,” VFA-34 “Blue Blasters” and VF-103 “Jolley Rogers” returned home after a six-month deployment aboard the USS George Washington in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. (Photo by Gary C. Knapp/Getty Images)

A Virginia woman has been convicted of intentionally pointing a homemade strobe light at a Navy aircraft.

Lou Ella Moore, 64, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor interference with aircraft operation, WAVY-TV reported Thursday. She was sentenced to 180 days, all suspended, and 50 hours of community service, the station said, citing the Virginia Beach Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office.

Moore was aiming the strobe lights at Naval Air Station Oceana aircraft and attempting to direct them as they were conducting night training operations near an auxiliary landing field in Chesapeake this winter, Virginia Beach Police and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service said at the time.

Air Station Oceana uses the rural landing field near Virginia Beach for fighter pilots to simulate landing on an aircraft carrier, The Virginian-Pilot reported at the time.

“NCIS personnel observed Lou Moore using a homemade device made of multiple lights fastened to a garden rake, and pointing it at planes overhead,” NCIS spokesman Jeff Houston wrote in an email to the newspaper in March.

Such lights can cause pilots to become disoriented.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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