Man charged with shining laser pointer at Trump helicopter

Man charged with shining laser pointer at Trump helicopter

In this file photo US President Donald Trump on board, the Marine One presidential helicopter (bottom) is followed by a VH-92A Patriot presidential transport helicopter on September 22, 2025 at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland. Trump is traveling to New York City to participate in the United Nations General Assembly. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by CHIP SOMODEVILLA / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

September 23, 2025

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP)-US authorities charged a man who shone a laser pointer at the presidential helicopter as it departed the White House with President Trump aboard, according to a court filing Monday.

A Secret Service officer saw Jacob Samuel Winkler, 33, shine a red laser beam from the sidewalk outside the White House grounds, pointing it at the Marine One helicopter as it took off on Saturday, an affidavit said.

Winkler was detained at the scene and charged with aiming a laser pointer at an aircraft — a felony punishable by up to five years in prison.

Winkler’s “conduct posed a risk of flash blindness and pilot disorientation, especially during low-level flight near other helicopters… and the Washington Monument,” the filing said.

“This placed Marine One at risk of an airborne collision.”

After he was handcuffed, Winkler “got on his knees and started saying things like, ‘I should apologise to Donald Trump,'” the filing, signed by the Secret Service officer, showed.

Winkler later told authorities that “he did not know he could not point the laser at Marine One” and that “he points the laser at all kinds of things, such as stop signs.”

The filing did not mention whether anyone aboard the helicopter noticed the laser.

Trump had been travelling to the state of Virginia to give a speech to the American Cornerstone Institute, according to US media.

The Federal Aviation Administration says lasers pose a “serious safety threat” to aircraft and can incapacitate pilots.

The agency recorded 5,913 laser incidents this year.

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