Pubdate: Thu, 04 Aug 2011 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www2.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.theprovince.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Sam Cooper, The Province BLINDER OF PILOT FACES JAIL Man Shone Flashlight at Black Hawk Border-Patrol Helicopter Many in a small Washington town bordering Abbotsford will be praying today that the deacon who wielded a beacon to chase away "overzealous" border-patrol agents in low-flying Black Hawk choppers doesn't get sent to jail. Wayne Groen, 42, of Lynden will be sentenced in U.S. District Court in Seattle this afternoon, after a jury convicted him of temporarily blinding a U.S. border-patrol helicopter pilot in September 2010 with a powerful hand-held flashlight. The crime is a felony with a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 US fine. According to court documents, Groen -- a father of four, church deacon and owner of a successful manure-hauling business -- was jarred from sleep after a "large, military-grade" Black Hawk chopper "roared" over his home, waking his family and sending belongings on shelves smashing to the floor. "Where is that big light? That should chase them off," said Groen, according to his wife, Nicki, before dashing out to his shop only wearing his underwear and flashing his light at the chopper. The pilots, who were wearing night-vision goggles that intensified the beam from Groen's light, were forced to retreat, aborting a border crossing "interdiction" and headed into the airspace near Abbotsford airport. The case spotlights the "conflict that had developed over a number of years between many northern border residents and the U.S. Border Patrol," which has "tremendously" increased its presence recently, said Groen's lawyer, Jeffrey Lustick. Supporters from Lynden submitted more than 100 letters pleading for leniency for Groen, with many suggesting that he was wrong to wield his flashlight in frustration, but the vexatious Black Hawk choppers that have ruined crops and scared animals have disappeared since Groen made his stand. Robert Woodyard, Groen's pastor, wrote: "Wayne Groen is a family man, a business man, a church member and a responsible citizen. He's also a man's man and, when pushed into a corner and pushed too hard, he pushes back." Phil Bratt, a local businessman, wrote: "Since the addition of the Black Hawk helicopters a few years back, we have had times of constant rumbling noise from these loud aircraft. It has got to the point where those of us living in this area have become more intruded upon by these federal officials than by those foreign intruders that they are charged with protecting us from." Lustick says Groen should be sentenced to a year's probation and a $5,000 fine. But prosecutors -- who have asked for a 10-month jail sentence -- say Groen is not a local hero, but a man who is "hostile, belligerent and actually enjoys harassing law enforcement." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.