Flying mailman becomes most audacious gyrocopter pilot since James Bond

The gyrocopter that landed on the Capitol grounds wasn't detected as it flew into restricted Washington airspace, a spokesman for the North American Aerospace Defense Command said. Norad spokesman Michael Kucharek 

Doug Hughes wouldn't like this story. After all, the Florida letter carrier who landed a gyro-copter at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday has long insisted that his message — not he — is what's important: "I'm just delivering the mail." advertisement

When disgruntled Florida mailman Doug Hughes landed his ultralight gyrocopter on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, he was hoping to stir a debate about campaign finance reform. And maybe he did. But the question that was on most 

Minutes ago, Twitter lit up with news about a man in a miniature gyrocopter who'd landed on the front lawn of the U.S. Capitol, where he was promptly arrested by police:

The Tampa Bay Times reporter who had advance knowledge of Doug Hughes' plans to land a gyrocopter near the U.S. Capitol spoke out on CNN this afternoon.