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Last updated on June 1, 2012 at 14:18 EDT

Astronauts Flew While Drunk, NASA Says

July 29, 2007
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By John Schwartz

Kenneth Chang and Warren E. Leary contributed reporting.

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NASA’s astronauts have flown while intoxicated on at least two occasions, according to reports of an internal NASA investigation, and the astronauts involved were warned that their drunkenness constituted a safety risk to the flight. But it is unclear whether this is a current problem and whether the incidents involved space shuttle flights.

The report, which has not been released, was described in an article published Thursday on the Web site of Aviation Week and Space Technology. According to the article, the panel investigators reported ” ‘heavy use of alcohol’ by astronauts” within 12 hours of flying.

According to people who have seen the report, it is a 12-page document with a single paragraph that deals with the accusations of alcohol and flying. It gives no details or specifics on the astronauts or the circumstances surrounding the incidents.

NASA announced that it would hold a news conference about the report Friday. On Thursday, NASA officials were questioned about it at a news conference about the next shuttle mission, that of the Endeavour, which is scheduled to lift off as early as Aug. 7.

William Gerstenmaier, the head of space operations for NASA, declined to discuss the report before its release, but said: “I’ve never had any instances” involving safety risks because of drunken astronauts.

“There’s not been a disciplinary action or anything I’ve been involved with regarding this type of activity,” Gerstenmaier said.

A veteran astronaut, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment, said he had seen no evidence of alcohol problems before shuttle missions. “As with any group of people, some people drink and some don’t on social occasions,” he said of the astronaut corps.

The report was ordered by the NASA administrator, Michael Griffin, after the February arrest of an astronaut, Captain Lisa Marie Nowak of the navy, who confronted a romantic rival in the parking lot of Orlando International Airport. Nowak has since been fired by NASA and will be tried in Florida on charges of assault and attempted kidnapping.

Griffin asked the panel to evaluate the medical and psychological screening that astronauts receive to determine whether there were problem areas.

At Thursday’s news conference, Gerstenmaier also acknowledged that a worker at a space agency subcontractor had deliberately cut wires inside equipment headed for the International Space Station. The sabotage was discovered before the device was loaded onto the Endeavour.

The device is not critical to the space station, Gerstenmaier said, so even if the damage had not been detected, the loss of the device would not have posed any danger to astronauts. The equipment is being repaired, he said, adding that the incident was under investigation.

(c) 2007 International Herald Tribune. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.