LAZER LOUTS Plane returns to London after laser was beamed into cockpit

Posted on 02/16/2016 | About London, United Kingdom

The crew of flight VS025 decided to return to Heathrow rather than making the trans-Atlantic crossing, the airline said in a statement. Passengers were offered overnight accommodation.

Police said they were contacted Sunday evening and that no arrests have been made. “This is not an isolated incident,” said Jim McAuslan, the organization's general secretary. “Aircraft are attacked with lasers at an alarming rate and with lasers with ever-increasing strength.” According to civil aviation authorities in Britain, there were 414 such incidents in the first half of 2015 and some 1,440 in 2014. The organization wants British authorities to classify lasers as offensive weapons. John Tyrer, a professor of optical instrumentation at Loughborough University, said it's not just airline pilots who are targets. He has been working with police officers facing riots in Northern Ireland to develop a strip on visors to counter such attacks. “Laser attacks present a horrendous problem which is worsening with the easy availability of low-cost, high-power lasers,” he said. He said that it is possible to buy powerful lasers with a range of kilometres - rather than a few meters - particularly if the atmospheric conditions are right. Tyrer stressed that these more powerful lasers have no practical use. “There are people that buy these things off the Internet which are shipped in typically from the Far East, which are very, very powerful lasers and have no use as a pointer,” he said. He said anyone hit with a laser could have watering eyes or a headache, though he cautioned that he had no direct knowledge of what the Virgin pilot might have suffered. “This is not a prank,” Tyrer said. “There are laws that say you can't do this.”