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Press Release

St. Charles County Man Sentenced For Pointing A Laser At An Aircraft

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of Missouri

St. Louis, MO - MICHAEL BRANDON SMITH, formerly of O’Fallon, Missouri, was sentenced to two years of probation, two months home confinement and  40 hours of community service for pointing a laser at a Metro St. Louis Air Support Police helicopter on May 18, 2012.

According to court documents, on May 18, 2012, a St. Louis Metro Air Support Police helicopter was engaged in a routine police patrol. At approximately 10:00 p.m., the helicopter was dispatched to a call of a possible burglary in progress at a school located near 200 Meriwether in St. Charles County. As the helicopter began a search of the Meriwether property, the pilot and observer noted that the helicopter was struck several times by a green laser beam.  When the beam struck the glass of the helicopter, it impacted the vision of the pilot and observer.  As a result, the helicopter had to pull away from the search of the Meriwether property.

The helicopter  then proceeded toward the direction of the laser beam and was struck again by the beam.  The pilot and observer were asked to locate the source of the green laser beam and determined that it came from a residence in the 2700 block of Red Cedar Parc Drive South, in O'Fallon.  The pilot and observer saw Smith standing in his driveway with the laser.  O'Fallon police responded to that location and observed Smith with  a laser  pointer in his hand.  He was arrested and the laser was seized.  He told O'Fallon police that he had been drinking and playing around with the laser and pointed it at the helicopter. The police observer in the helicopter reported that he had some short-term visual problems as a result of the laser strike.

Smith pled guilty in November to one felony count of aiming the beam of a laser pointer at an aircraft, and appeared today for sentencing before United States District Judge Jean C. Hamilton.

This case was investigated by the O’Fallon Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.  Assistant United States Attorney Howard Marcus handled the case for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Updated March 19, 2015