This story has taken an interesting twist...
Police say man stole from pilot who died in fall
Death of flier, 85, is being probed
By Ralph Ranalli, Globe Staff | December 24, 2005
A Mattapoisett man was charged yesterday with stealing more than $6,000 from a well-known test pilot and aviator who was found dead last week of a broken neck at the bottom of the stairs in his home, police and prosecutors said.
First Assistant Plymouth District Attorney Frank Middleton said yesterday that the Dec. 16 death of 85-year-old David Frawley is being probed by State Police investigators, but has not yet been ruled suspicious.
''The investigation is still ongoing," Middleton said. ''We are not going to comment on whether it is suspicious or not suspicious until the facts are in."
Frawley, who recently received a citation from the Massachusetts Aeronautics Commission commending his 65 years of accident-free flying, was initially believed to have died accidentally from a fall, police said. While still in good shape, the aviator recently had knee-replacement surgery and had been using canes or a walker to get around, a friend said.
Mattapoisett Police Chief Mary Lyons told a television reporter that investigators are looking into a possible connection between Frawley's death and 31-year-old Michael Picewick, who now faces charges of larceny, forgery, and passing false checks.
''There is some concern that Mr. Picewick could be involved," Lyons told WBZ television in an interview broadcast yesterday.
At a hearing in Wareham District Court, Picewick pleaded not guilty to four counts of uttering a false check, three counts of forgery, and four counts of larceny from a person over 65 years old, police said. Police and prosecutors charge that Picewick befriended Frawley and did some odd jobs for him, but then took the checks that Frawley had given him and altered them to increase the amounts.
A few days before his death, Frawley had also reported to police that some checks from his account had been stolen.
Prosecutors asked that Picewick be held on $10,000 bail, but Wareham District Court Judge Brian F. Gilligan set bail in the case at $2,500 cash, which Picewick posted, Middleton said.
Richard Porter, a friend and aviation journalist, said Frawley was smart, sometimes abrasive, and a near-legend in the world of pilots and aircraft.
''Dave was a very brilliant, crusty old man," said Porter, the owner of Atlantic Flyer, a monthly print and online newspaper that bills itself as the oldest aviation newspaper on the East Coast. ''If he liked you, he loved you. If he didn't like you, you knew it."
Porter said Frawley took his first flight for $1 at Seekonk Airport as a boy and was hooked. By his early 20s, he was a flight instructor for the US Army Air Corps during World War II. During a long career as a test pilot and teacher, Frawley became rated as an instructor in 50 different aircraft types, a number that may be a record, Porter said.
A specialist at flying older aircraft with radial engines, Frawley was, at various points in his career, the only instructor in the world who could legally certify a new pilot on some rare types of aircraft, Porter said.
''Dave was the instructor of the instructors," Porter said.
Found it here....
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massac ... d_in_fall/