______________________________________________
AFFIDAVIT OF DANIEL W. HANLEY IN SUPPORT OF
 CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION OF ALLEGED
 VIOLATIONS
         OF FEDERAL LAW
________________________________________________
I, Daniel W. Hanley, being first duly sworn, on oath, states
         as follows:
 
1.
         I am of legal age and competent. This affidavit is made on my personal  knowledge of all matters set forth and referenced
         herein. If sworn and  called as a witness in this case, I could, and I would, testify  competently as to each fact set forth
         and incorporated herein by  reference.
 
2.  The alleged facts supported with evidence are true and correct to the  best of my personal
         knowledge of the facts, evidence, information and  belief.
 
3.  I am of information and belief that I was terminated from active  employment
         in a medically grounded status as a United Airlines B-777  Captain on December 30, 2003 directly as a result of submission
         of  federally-mandated Flight Safety Awareness Reports under the auspices of  the Aviation Safety Awareness Program (ASAP)
         outlined in the United  Airlines Flight Operations Manual (FOM), which is intrinsically a legal  part by Federal Aviation
         Regulations, Part 121, Operating Requirements:  Domestic, Flag, and Supplemental Operations.
 
4.  I am in possession of physical evidence
         that supports allegations of  this criminal activity, which includes witness testimony, letters and  emails, copies of filed
         reports, medical and psychological reports, and  other information pertaining to this matter.
 
5.  I am of information and belief that
         commencing in 2002, after numerous  phone calls, emails, letters, and face-to-face conversations with both  United management
         and Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) officials, (the  union that represents United pilots), as well as the persistent  stonewalling
         of filed internal federal company reports addressing  critical safety matters, that potential illegal ambiguities existed
         in  the normally afforded federal communicative processes for reporting said  issues, which existed prior to 9/11.
 
6.  I am of information
         and belief that prior to 9/11, United Airlines  maintained an open-door communications policy that enabled any employee  to
         address areas of concern to any level manager within the company.  Because my previously addressed safety issues were not
         addressed and I  was informed by an ALPA MEC safety official during a phone conversation  in early 2003 that upper-level management
         considered me a “big-mouth  whistle blower” and wanted me to “go away”, I forwarded an advance copy
          of a July 23, 2003 letter to ALPA attorneys in Chicago for review of  legal content, that I intended to mail to United CEO
         Glenn Tilton  addressing my safety concerns regarding the stifling of federal reports  by management. Additionally, in the
         letter, I had expressed concern that  perhaps the financial pressures exerted with the airline in Chapter 11  bankruptcy might
         somehow be thwarting union efforts to legally safeguard  reporting pilot?s efforts.
 
7.  On July 27, 2003, I received a joint
         phone call from a United ALPA  attorney and ALPA Grievance Committee Chairman in Chicago advising me  that they had read my
         proposed letter to CEO Tilton, agreed that the  content of the letter did not violate United Airlines company policy or  the
         ALPA Code of Ethics, but recommended that I not send the letter.   When I queried their reason(s), the United ALPA Grievance
         Committee  Chairman stated, “Go ahead and send that letter in if you never want to  fly another United aircraft again
         in your life”. I was then further  advised that United Airlines management would somehow remove me from  scheduled flight
         operations as a pilot on professional, medical,  psychological, or other grounds, as they had observed done with other  pilots
         in the past. When I further questioned the ALPA attorney how far  into this process I could expect ALPA legal representation,
         he responded  by saying “not very far”.
 
8.  On August 18, 2003, I received a phone call from my New York ALPA  Council
         representative informing me that he had been directed by ALPA  legal to send me an email letter response through his ALPA
         National  Herndon, Va email address that would automatically illicit a receipt  that I had opened the letter. He went on to
         tell me that he understood  and agreed with what I was doing, but to “watch it, Dan…these guys are  nasty”.
         When I queried him as to whom “these guys” were, he told me he  couldn’t say. I had previously been advised
         by this individual through  another captain associate of mine that “if you take this thing to the  next level, you’re
         going to get hurt”. I then advised my council  representative that if I had to, sometime in the future I would file
          suit against ALPA just to get him on a witness stand under oath to  testify as to who “these guys” were, to which
         he responded by saying  “you get me on that stand and I’ll give you names, places, and dates”.
 
9.  From the outset,
         and throughout this process, I did not desire to bring  these matters to public light through outside legal action that might
          draw public and media attention, as United Airlines was financially  compromised in bankruptcy court, and I didn’t
         want to potentially  jeopardize the jobs of the hundred thousand United Airline employees by  doing so. Since all previously
         filed reports, letters, and emails sent  were strictly internal within the company, and because I still desired  to address
         these issues, a decision was reached by me on September 14,  2003 to file a series of federal ASAP reports addressing the
         same  concerns as those outlined in the letter to CEO Tilton with the intent  of drawing the United Airlines FAA Principle
         Operations Inspector (POI)  into the communications loop to address my concerns. Additional reports  were sent through September
         18th as well.
 
10.  On September 19, 2003 I called the United ALPA Central Air Safety  Vice-Chairman who had served on the
         Event Review Committee (ERC) that  reviewed my reports, which is comprised of three members, one each from  United management,
         ALPA, and the FAA POI, to inquire specifically as to  the POI’s, response to my allegations that previously submitted
         federal  reports had been stonewalled by upper-level United Airlines management.  He informed me that the POI expressed concern
         and wanted to respond,  pending further investigation into the matter.
 
11.  On September 30, 2003, I received a call from my JFK Assistant
         Chief  Pilot advising me that I had been removed from scheduled flight  operations by upper-level United Airlines management
         because of the  reports submitted and that I would be required to fly to New York to  meet with him before I would be permitted
         to fly again. When I reminding  him that the issues addressed within the reports were concerns that I  had expressed numerous
         times face-to-face and on the phone with both him  and my Chief Pilot, he told me that he had orders from above.  Additionally,
         I suggested that the integrity of the ASAP program had  been violated in that reports submitted supposedly guaranteed anonymity
          and impunity, both of which had been compromised, he gave me a direct  order. I explained that since an ALPA attorney had
         already advised me  that ALPA would not follow me in on this “very far”, for me to legally  protect my career,
         my personal attorney would be required in attendance  of any scheduled meeting and the transcripts recorded for my protection,
          to which he refused. I was informed that a conference call was  currently underway between a management captain at the United
         Airlines  Training Center  in Denver, United Airlines
         attorneys in Chicago, United Airlines Human  Resource personnel, and the JFK Flight office concerning my filed  reports.
 
12.  Subsequent to this,
         through September and into October, numerous phone  calls were made by me to United Airline management, an ALPA attorney in
          Chicago, my union representatives, and others trying to draw a  compromise without bringing these issues to public light,
         while still  protecting my legal interests and career, to no avail. I was insistent  that I be represented by my own legal
         counsel at proposed meetings,  which was denied on all counts.
 
13.  Digressing momentarily, because I had been forewarned
         early on by ALPA  captain associates that the typical process employed by management to  remove “dissident” pilots
         was through dismissal via the Employee  Assistance Program (EAP) on psychological or other grounds, wherein the  pilot lost
         his medical certification required to fly aircraft, early in  2003, I employed the assistance of competent mental health professionals
          in the Atlanta area to confirm soundness of my mental health through  consultation and testing, which I have continued through
         today for that  very reason. On one occasion during this time frame, after I was removed  from schedule, I was invited by
         both United Airlines management and  ALPA personnel to fly to New York to visit their mental health  professionals, wherein
         I would be grounded for “psychological reasons”,  but I politely declined this invitation, for reasons stated
         above. It  was not my goal or desire to seek a medical grounding, but to address  the issues contained in my ASAP reports.
 
14.  At some later point
         in time, I received a phone call from my JFK Chief  Pilot who informed me that Dr. Gary Kohn, United Airlines Chief Flight
          Surgeon, had seen him face-to-face at the Denver Flight Training Center  and ordered him to “put that (expletive deleted)
         on sick list”. This was  done without warrant or my having had a medical evaluation by any  member of the United Airlines
         medical team. When my Chief Pilot queried  as to the justification for this action, he was informed that it came  from higher
         up in management. Having known him for years, my Chief Pilot  apologized saying that “my hands are tied on this one,
         Dan”.
 
15.
          Running out of sick leave, with nowhere else to turn within the  organization for legal assistance or compromise, on October
         6, 2003, I  called my JFK Chief Pilot to inquire as to my options at this point in  time. He suggested that I submit to EAP,
         as it was endorsed by the FAA,  would protect my career, and guarantee future income. Because I had  already consulted mental
         health professionals and because I had done  nothing wrong (quite to the contrary, I believed that what I was doing  was the
         right thing for an airline pilot to do), I agreed to submit to  this program and file an FAA Whistle Blower Protection Report
         at a later  date with the evidence I possessed of alleged criminal wrongdoing. My  Chief Pilot kept repeatedly insisting that
         it was the “right thing to  do” (by submitting to EAP). It should be emphasized that I was informed  in this phone
         conversation that program participation obliged me to  comply with any request made by company EAP or medical professionals
         for  continuance in the program to guarantee future income.
 
16.  On October 7, 2003, I was given a first-class positive space ticket  from
         Atlanta, my home domicile, to Chicago O’Hare and reported to a  United EAP representative Mary Ann Sheppard at the O’Hare
         Medical  Department. During this visit, Dr. McGuffen, the United Flight Surgeon  at O’Hare, interviewed me in the presence
         of the EAP representative, the  O’Hare Chief Pilot, and an ALPA EAP representative. I advised him of  the sequence of
         events that led me to his office and that I had already  been apprised by others that EAP was a method of expulsion of pilots.
         I  also informed him that I had been previously consulting with mental  health professionals in the Atlanta area and offered
         to let him speak  with one of them on the phone, which he did. Afterwards, Dr. McGuffen  asked me if I would be willing to
         travel to a mental health facility of  their choosing for a psychological examination, which I agreed to do  because of the
         advisement of cooperation by my Chief Pilot the previous  day. The O’Hare Chief Pilot and ALPA EAP representative then
         drove me to  Alexian Brothers Behavioral Health Hospital in Hoffman Estates,  Illinois for said evaluation. On the drive there,
         I apprised both of  these captains of the details of my legal dilemma and advised them of my  intent to file an FAA Whistle
         Blower Protection report with the FAA the  next day. After checking in at the facility, we were ushered to a  conference room
         where I consulted with a psychologist, a Catholic nun,  in the presence of the two other pilots. She advised me that it would
         be  necessary for me to consult with a psychiatrist but, because it was  late in the day, I would have to wait till the first
         thing in the  morning. She told me that arrangements could be made for my stay in the  facility with the promise of an early
         morning meeting, to which I  mistakenly agreed to do as discussed below. I was directed to a second  floor check-in desk where
         all my personal belongings were locked in a  safe and I was given a room with another individual who was  paranoid-schizophrenic.
         I did not realize at the time of check-in, that  once one admits oneself to such a facility, the state has the legal  right
         to retain you for up to five days. I was also told to check to  ensure that no one was hiding beneath my bed or in my bathroom
         before  going to bed, as women patients in the coed wing might attempt to  sexually molest me during the night. When I insisted
         that I be permitted  to lock my door, the request was denied since orderlies had to check on  patients during the night. Unbeknownst
         to me, sometime during the  afternoon, my children were informed that their father was interned at a  mental health facility
         in Chicago. Additionally, my wife, who is still  an active United Airlines flight attendant, had just arrived at her  London
         layover hotel and was immediately returned to Chicago via New  York with advisement that “something has happened to
         Dan” and that I was  in a mental facility in Chicago. In the evening, I was ordered to  report to the dispensary, as
         the facility wanted to provide me with  sleep medication, which I wanted to refuse, as I was exhausted already  from an already
         long day, but they insisted. I should point out that I  was very calm and rational throughout the day, in spite of trying
          circumstances. I discovered the next day that the medication that I was  given was Adavan.
 
17.  Very early in the morning of October
         8, 2003, I was discovered  unconscious on the floor of my room with medical attendants surrounding  me, with my blood pressure
         at 60 over 40 and the side of my face very  swollen from a fall. I had gotten up to use the bathroom and had passed  out on
         the floor from the medication. The next morning they rushed me to  medical where an extensive physical examination was performed.
          Subsequently, I was required to attend and participate in group therapy  sessions with extremely psychotic patients and dine
         with them as well.  My wife arrived that afternoon and I apprised her of the situation and  told her that I needed to consult
         with the psychiatrist to cover myself  legally, while complying with EAP requirements. I had also attempted to  console my
         children, but the stigmatized damage was already done. Their  dad was in a mental institution in Chicago. That afternoon,
         I met with  both a psychologist and a psychiatrist in my room and was asked to spend  one more night for additional consultation,
         to which I reluctantly  agreed, but refused any medication that night.
 
18.  Very early in the morning of October 9th, because I could
         not sleep due  to the loud snoring of my roommate, I left my room to read a book at a  couch under the light at the end of
         the hall. I was approached by a  well-dressed African-American gentleman who did not identify himself,  but knew my name and
         why I was interned. Initially, I assumed that he  was a physician, as he wore a very nice suit, but did not understand why
          he came down to talk to me. During our brief conversation he said to  me, “C’mon Dan, why don’t you just
         drop what you’ve been doing?”. I  informed him that I believed what I had done was appropriate pilot  behavior
         and he left. Later in the morning, after our group therapy  session, I met once again with the Dr. Mohinder Chadha, MD, and
          attempted to explicitly detail the events that led me to her facility,  but since she was not familiar with the complexities
         of the aviation  safety issues that I was addressing such as ASAPs, she could not fully  comprehend my current legal dilemma.
         In the end, she consented to  release me with her own clinical diagnosis and an agreement that I would  consult with my Atlanta
         mental health professionals, which I did. That  evening, I reunited with my wife at a Chicago hotel and was advised that 
         she had been in contact with a United ALPA attorney who had given her  the name and phone number of Dr. Donald Hudson, the
         ALPA Aeromedical  Advisor, whose office was located in Denver.
 
19.  On October 13th, my wife and I flew to Denver to pay a
         surprise visit  to the office of Dr. Hudson. During our one hour consultation, I  apprised him of the details of my situation,
         but surmised that he had  already been briefed by ALPA legal in Chicago. I told him that by  submitting ASAPs, I was fulfilling
         my obligation as a captain and that I  felt that my previously submitted reports had been stonewalled by  upper-level management.
         He responded by saying “we don’t do business  that way anymore”, to which I replied “I do”.
         He told me that ALPA was  awaiting the clinical diagnosis from the Alexian Behavioral Health  Hospital psychiatrist and that
         he would be in touch with me and FAA  medical personnel for administrative disposition of my case. Purely  speculative on
         my part, but I surmised at this point in time that the  legal and political skids had already been greased and hence, would
         have  to legally fight this battle at another time, on another day via an FAA  Whistle Blower Protection report once United
         Airlines emerged from  bankruptcy.
 
20.  On November 4, 2003, I received a phone call from my JFK Chief Pilot  advising me that
         he was receiving much pressure from upper-level United  Airlines management in administratively discharging me through “medical
          grounding” with insistence that I proceed with the administrative  requirements for doing so.
 
21.  After much phone
         call deliberation with both company and union  management personnel, on November 11, 2003 I paid a visit to my Atlanta  psychiatrist
         wherein I accepted his clinical diagnosis and prescriptive  medication, which in no way denigrates the validity of my previous
          claims or actions as an airline pilot. Unbeknownst to me at the time,  the medication prescribed grounded me for life as
         a pilot, which I did  not discover until later. In accordance with contractual provisions and  company policy, I filed for
         short-term medical disability.
 
22.  On December 22, 2003, I called Dr. Bernie Weiss, the JFK Flight Surgeon  to question
         the status of my letter application for short-term  disability and was advised that upper-level management had already  informed
         him that my long-term disability had already been approved.  When I attempted to discuss details of my termination, he advised
         me  that he was merely following company directives, and did not discuss the  issues any further.
 
23.  On December 30, 2003, I was placed
         in a permanently medically grounded  status, thus ending a thirty-five year career in both Naval and  commercial aviation,
         as a result of attempting to be honest in the  reporting of safety issues.
 
24.  On April 6, 2006, shortly after United Airlines emerged
         from Chapter 11  bankruptcy, I filed an electronic FAA Whistle Blower Protection Report  alleging criminality as stated above.
         Additionally, I wrote to then  Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta the same. To date, I have not  received a response
         from the Department of Transportation or the Federal  Aviation Administration.
 
25.  On November 8, 2006 at 8 pm, in a phone conversation with
         the former  United ALPA Grievance Committee Chairman included in the phone  conversation of July 27, 2003, it was admitted
         to me that I had, in  fact, been “railroaded” off the property at United Airlines.
 
26.  I am of information and belief that
         there are other airline pilots  whose careers have met the same demise on similar issues regarding the  reporting of unsafe
         conditions in the commercial aviation arena via ASAP  reports or other means. The current absence of ASAP programs by unions
          at both UsAir and American Airlines as a result of recriminations 
         against reporting pilots in some instances, smacks of similar, although  less harsh, recriminations imposed on myself and
         my family.
 
27.
          I am of opinion and belief that there exists other retired ALPA airline  pilots who have either observed or participated
         in the above described  process of “elimination” of active line pilots, and who would be willing  to provide witness
         testimony in this matter.
 
28.  I seek no financial restitution, compensatory damage claims, or  restoration to my pilot job at United
         Airlines in providing the  aforementioned horror story. It my hope that by divulging the details of  this horrific event in
         my aviation career, it will somehow preclude any  other airline industry pilot from ever having to endure the same for  himself
         or his family, and pray for the restitution of honor, dignity,  and respect of commercial airline pilots as safety professionals
         within  the industry with the added hope that political and financial pressures  will never be brought to bear, which denigrates
         safety in the future.
 
29.  My involvement in these matters has created much disharmony within my  loving family. We are shouldering
         this cross with our faith and trust in  God, our political leaders, justice system, law enforcement agencies,  and our Constitutional
         rights of freedom of speech.
 
30. Further affiant sayeth naught.
__________________________
DANIEL W. HANLEY
SWORN
         before me on This 16th day of February 2009
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC