by wingspan33 » Thu Mar 29, 2018 9:37 am
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* * * Bob, I don't mean to undercut your above comments. But I think that presenting another perspective to Free could be useful. * * *
Free,
I don't know how your problem could be resolved here. I wish it could but I don't think it's realistic to get your hopes up.
Comment #1 - The US Hawks has no pressure to bare on the other parties involved. Blindrodie won't become a member here (to discuss this issue) unless or until he has a change of heart. How likely do you think that is?
Question #1 - When did the Dragonfly get stolen?
Comment #2 - What confuses me is you imply it was yours but also that it was owned by a partnership? Well, if it was yours and you knew the people or persons who stole it, did you call the police?
Comment #3 - If it was not solely yours then the manner in which the partnership was formed (any legal contracts, government forms, signed documents, etc.) can lead you to how to resolve the situation. That would be to file official complaints to an overseeing authority. If it was just a bunch of friends pooling their money, very informally, to buy the tow rig, then you've got a tougher problem.
Comment #4 - Sometimes filing a civil law suit against a person is the best/only way to get a resolution. Oddly enough creating a civil (not criminal) complaint in Federal Court, and acting as your own lawyer, (which can cost only a couple hundred dollars, or if your very poor - nothing) is the best way to go. Why not State Court? Because they often make it very hard and complicated to proceed without a high cost lawyer. On the other hand, the Federal Courts have to allow for a person to proceed Pro Se (representing themselves).
Paperwork to create the civil complaint can usually be found on the local Federal Court's web site - and downloaded from there. Besides the facts of the case, you'll need the proper name of the party your suing and the address where they are located. If you were to go this route, keep the description of the complaint as simple as possible. What you get if you win is probably only $, but perhaps the property could be returned - if you were in fact the sole owner.
I would finish up by explaining my own personal story. Rochester Area Flyers (RAF) decided over a couple years time (2007-2008) that I was out to destroy hang gliding here in Central NY. However they were turning trivial problems into mountains and efforts of mine to permanently secure one launch site as an effort to have it permanently closed. Their perspective (as a u$hPa Chapter) was so distorted that I quit my membership. But RAF decided to go further and started harassing me on a different local club's forum site. My acting to defend myself drove the "list owner" to ban me from "his" forum. Combining all this together led me to complain to Paul Voight our Region 12 u$hPa director. Voight's involvement made things worse and completely ignored the local Chapters' violations of a number of u$hPa's SOPs. As a result, in 2013, I refused to renew my membership with the obviously incompetent u$hPa.
Like your situation, all the parties to that situation are not going to come here to the US Hawks to discuss the issues - and make everything right in the world.
They have no incentive because they think they hold the high ground. My issues are 5+ years old. And as a result, I haven't been able to fly any of the local sites since 2012. I LOVE hang gliding (started flying 43 years ago) and have been seriously damaged by the improper actions of two local u$hPa Chapters and the failure to resolve those issues by my local RD/USHPA. I have threatened to sue but still have not moved forward with that suit. That's on me. But as long as I don't feel comfortable flying local sites I am still incurring damage so I still have a legal case.
I think my situation is, in some ways, similar to yours. Realistically, I don't think your problems will be fixed here on the Hawks just like I don't think mine will be. I see the US Hawks most important (political) goal as addressing and working to improve national scale problems with the state of the sport of hang gliding. It's also a growing community of hang glider pilots who've become disenchanted with the USHPA and their BIG focus on collapsible canopies and their occupants.
Resolving possible issues between existing members here is surely something that could/should take place - but I'm not sure we've ever had such a problem come up. Here on the US Hawks we're not into picking fights with each other - as opposed to those other well known hang gliding forum sites.
I hope my above comments help in some way. Fell free to respond.