Reagan National Airport Traffic Controller on Leave After Assault Charges

Reagan National Airport Traffic Controller on Leave After Assault Charges
An American Airlines Airbus A319 airplane takes off past the air traffic control tower at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Va., on Jan. 11, 2023. Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images
Juliette Fairley
Updated:
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The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority (MWAA) confirmed Tuesday that an individual was taken into police custody after reports of an incident in the air traffic control tower at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) on March 27.

Airports Authority police arrested Damon Marsalis Gaines, 39, of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, and charged him with assault and battery, MWAA spokesperson James Johnson told NTD, sister media of The Epoch Times, in an email.

Emily McGee, also a spokesperson for MWAA, said Gaines is not an employee of MWAA.

“On Thursday night, he was taken to the Arlington (County) Detention Center and released in a magistrate summons for assault and battery,” McGee told NTD in an April 1 email.

A Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) spokesperson also told NTD via email about the altercation that “the employee is on administrative leave while we investigate the matter.”

The National Air Traffic Controllers Association deputy director of public affairs, Galen Munroe, declined to comment.

GovSalaries.com lists a person named Marsalis Damon Gaines as holding a job in air traffic control from 2016 to 2023, and in 2018, earning a salary of $130,836 annually, according to Department of Transportation records.

The incident occurred after a fatal collision on Jan. 29 between a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines passenger jet that killed 67 people who were on board both aircraft near the airport.

More recently, on March 28 at 3:15 p.m., a Delta Air Lines flight departing the airport, and four flyover military jets, narrowly averted a collision.

Since the Jan. 29 collision, the FAA has placed permanent restrictions on helicopter flights.

Prior to the ban, 28 government agencies were authorized to fly helicopters near Reagan National, such as emergency medical services, the Department of Defense, military, and police. Exceptions will now only be made for presidential flights, law enforcement flights, and lifesaving missions.

The FAA is also requiring most Ronald Reagan National Airport planes to have their Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) tracking technology turned on. The Black Hawk helicopter’s ADS-B was off when it collided with the American Airlines flight and killed 67 people, investigators told senators during a briefing. ADS-B provides more accurate and real-time surveillance of a plane’s altitude, location, and ground speed.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Juliette Fairley
Juliette Fairley
Freelance reporter
Juliette Fairley is a freelance reporter for The Epoch Times and NTD and a graduate of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. Born in Chateauroux, France, and raised outside of Lackland Air Force Base in Texas, Juliette is a well-adjusted military brat. She has written for many publications across the country. Send Juliette story ideas at [email protected]