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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Copters vandalized at Boeing

Randy Pennell Associated Press

RIDLEY PARK, Pa. – Two military helicopters were vandalized on the production line at a Boeing factory near Philadelphia, the Defense Department said Thursday as it offered a reward.

Federal officials handed out fliers to workers at the Boeing Rotorcraft Systems plant listing a $5,000 reward for information leading to whomever damaged the two H-47 Chinook helicopters.

“We have determined that this was a deliberate act and not an accident,” Ken Maupin, an agent with the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, said at a news conference outside the plant.

He said 10 agents were investigating, but he would not comment on specifics or what led to the determination that it was vandalism.

The Chinook is the Army’s workhorse aircraft and is used to move troops and supplies. Boeing is producing new Chinooks for the Army, as well as updating older models.

The military has not grounded any helicopters now in use.

A production line at the plant has not been fully functional since Tuesday, when two workers found what the company called irregularities in the helicopters.

There are no surveillance cameras on the production line, said Jack Satterfield, a company spokesman.

U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak has said he was told that broken or severed wires were found in one helicopter and that a suspicious washer was found in a second. Maupin described the washer as being in a place it shouldn’t.

“You have a large number of workers here at this point and one or more that was the problem,” Maupin said. “The majority of the people here are hard-working, loyal Americans, and many of them are veterans.”

U.S. Attorney Patrick Meehan said he was comfortable with the conclusion the damage was done deliberately. “There are federal statutes that would implicate anybody who intentionally interfered with a mechanism like this that is being introduced into a theater of war,” Meehan said.