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Jet pilots used hand gestures and flares to try to get Leon to land the plane, but "he just kept heading south," said John Gillies, the FBI agent in charge of the St. Louis office. At times, Leon flew as high as 14,000 feet -- extraordinarily high for a non-pressurized aircraft, said Catherine Hanaway, the U.S. attorney in St. Louis. The plane was dangerously close to running out of fuel when it landed near Ellsinore on a former stretch of U.S. 60 that is now just a loop off the main highway. The pilot taxied the plane to a side road and got a ride from a passer-by to Simmons Grocery and Hardware, where he used the restroom, bought a Gatorade and sat at a booth until state troopers arrived and arrested him. According to the federal complaint, Leon told the FBI he "has not felt like himself lately" and he recently was being treated by a psychiatrist. Leon would face up to 10 years in prison if convicted and would serve any sentence in the U.S. before being deported, Hanaway said.
[Associated
Press;
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