California YouTuber sentenced to prison following deliberately crashing airplane

California YouTuber sentenced to prison following deliberately crashing airplane


YouTuber Trevor Daniel Jacob seems completely ready to bounce from his airplane, which afterwards crashed.

TrevorJacob through YouTube

A California gentleman was sentenced to six months in federal jail on Monday for allegedly lying to federal authorities when they ended up investigating an plane he deliberately crashed to make a YouTube online video.

The guy, former Olympic snowboarder Trevor Daniel Jacob, filmed the YouTube video clip stunt to encourage a wallet from a business that sponsored him, according to the plea agreement filed in the Central District of California. He pled responsible to destruction and concealment of a tangible item with intent to hinder a federal investigation.

Jacob took off on a solo flight on Nov. 24, 2021, in Santa Barbara County, California, and parachuted out of the airplane with a video clip digital camera and selfie stick. On landing, he hiked to the crash site in Los Padres Nationwide Forest. Two times later, he told the Countrywide Transportation Basic safety Board about the wreck.

The NTSB opened an investigation and notified Jacob that he was envisioned to protect the aircraft wreckage and that the agency would want to see it, according to the plea settlement. Jacob allegedly agreed to tell the NTSB of the location, but lied a number of moments when investigators asked about the following two months.

In December 2021, Jacob and a good friend allegedly chartered a helicopter to acquire them to the crash site and deliver the continues to be again to Santa Maria, California, in which Jacob’s pickup truck awaited, after which Jacob slash up the aircraft and set it in the rubbish in bits and items. Later on that month, the defendant posted the online video to YouTube with footage from the cameras he had put on the crashed airplane and the camera he held when he parachuted.

Many federal businesses, such as the U.S. Division of Transportation’s Office of Inspector Standard, the Federal Aviation Administration and the NTSB, worked with the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

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