You're not lying to the TC inspector. You're (perhaps) lying to the CAME.goldeneagle wrote: ↑Wed Nov 23, 2022 5:52 pmAt every medical you are asked if you have had any medical incidents or procedures since your last medical. If you say no at that point, and you have had your eyes done, that's not an administrative mishap, that's telling the medical examiner an outright falsehood.
Over 40 years of dealing with TC inspectors I've seen them let a lot of little things slide, but when they are lied to and realize it, the knives tend to come out.
Obviously I am not encouraging anyone to lie. I am merely pointing out the difference between a lie that would allow you to fly where it would otherwise disqualify you (eg lying about a heart attack) or an omission or lie that would only bypass administration.
I recall incident reports where the lack of having a night rating was not an issue, because paperwork was all filed just not processed yet. Or accident flights that didn't have a w&b or pax manifest , but it could be reconstructed and it turned out it was irrelevant as the plane was within limits. I don't recall any about hidden non-effect medical issues, but I somehow think the same principles would apply.
I could also be completely wrong!