Douglas Hughes, the Florida letter carrier who violated national airspace by landing his gyrocopter on Capitol Hill last month, could face 9.5 years in prison after he was indicted Wednesday by a federal grand jury.
Hughes, 61, of Ruskin, Florida, was charged in Washington, D.C., with flying without proper certification and violating aircraft registration requirements, both of them felonies, and misdemeanor counts of violating national defense airspace and operating a vehicle falsely labeled as a postal carrier.
His next court appearance was scheduled for May 21 in U.S. District Court.
RELATED: Gyrocopter landing raises serious security questions
In addition to the possible prison term, the government wants to keep Hughes’ gyrocopter, which he flew from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, to Washington on April 15 and landed on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol.
Hughes has said the airborne breach was to protest the influence of big money in politics by deliberately breaking the law to deliver 535 letters — one for each voting member of Congress.








