http://wcbstv.com/topstories/air.force.one.2.996457.html

Threatened Federal Sanctions Against NYPD, Secret Service, FBI & Mayor's
Office If Secret Ever Got Out
Furious Obama Apologizes: "It Will Never Happen Again"


A furious President Barack Obama ordered an internal review of Monday's
low-flying photo op over the Statue of Liberty.

CBS 2 HD has discovered the feds will have plenty to question.

Federal officials knew that sending two fighter jets and a 747 from the
presidential fleet to buzz ground zero and Lady Liberty might set off
nightmarish fears of a 9/11 replay, but they still ordered the photo-op
kept secret from the public.

In a memo obtained by CBS 2 HD, the Federal Aviation Administration's
James Johnston said the agency was aware of "the possibility of public
concern regarding DOD (Department of Defense) aircraft flying at low
altitudes" in an around New York City. But they demanded total secrecy
from the NYPD, the Secret Service, the FBI and even the mayor's office
and threatened federal sanctions if the secret got out.

"To say that it should not be made public knowing that it might scare
people it's just confounding," Sen. Charles Schumer said. "It's what
gives Washington and government a bad name. It's sheer stupidity."

The flyover -- apparently ordered by the White House Office of Military
Affairs so it would have souvenir photos of Air Force One with the
Statue of Liberty in the background -- had President Obama seeing red.
He ordered a probe and apologized.

"It was a mistake. It will never happen again," President Obama said.

The cost of the frivolous flight was about $60,000 an hour and that was
just for the presidential aircraft. That doesn't include the cost of the
two F-16s that came along.

The flight by the VC-25, a modified Boeing Co. 747, and two F-16 fighter
jets cost $328,835, Air Force spokeswoman Vicki Stein said.

That includes $300,658 for the larger plane, which flew a three-hour
mission, and about $28,178 for the F-16 jets, which flew 1.8 hours each,
Stein said in an e-mailed statement.

The NYPD was so upset about the demand for secrecy that Police
Commissioner Ray Kelly vowed never to follow such a directive again and
he accused the feds of inciting fears of a 9/11 replay.

"Did it show an insensitivity to the psychic wounds New York City has
after 9/11? Absolutely. No questions about it. It was quite
insensitive," Kelly said.

The mayoral aide who neglected to tell Mayor Michael Bloomberg about it
was reprimanded.
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