Schrenker's license revoked - 13 WTHR Indianapolis

Schrenker's license revoked

Updated:
Marcus Schrenker Marcus Schrenker
  • HeadlinesHeadlines

  • Saturday, May 18 2013 11:27 PM EDT2013-05-19 03:27:58 GMT
    Check your ticket to see if you have the winning Powerball numbers: Tonight's $600 million jackpot is the largest jackpot in Powerball history and the second largest among U.S. Lottery jackpots. Fingers
    Check your ticket to see if you have the winning Powerball numbers:   10-13-14-22-52 Powerball 11
  • Saturday, May 18 2013 11:27 PM EDT2013-05-19 03:27:28 GMT
    The Pacers have eliminated the New York Knicks 106-99 in Game 6 of the NBA Eastern Conference semifinals.
    The Pacers have eliminated the New York Knicks 106-99 in Game 6 of the NBA Eastern Conference semifinals.
  • Saturday, May 18 2013 8:10 PM EDT2013-05-19 00:10:01 GMT
    Ed Carpenter knew he was capable of another fast run, and it earned him the pole for the Indianapolis 500. The Indianapolis native bested IndyCar racing's big-name teams by claiming his first 500 pole
    Ed Carpenter knew he was capable of another fast run, and it earned him the pole for the Indianapolis 500.

Hamilton County - An Indiana financial adviser accused of trying to fake his death in a plane crash said he's been under psychiatric care and claims not to recall the events of the day he bailed out, a newspaper reported Friday.

Marcus Schrenker called The New York Post from the Escambia County Jail on Wednesday night and Thursday night and told the newspaper that he has no memory of the events of Jan. 11. Authorities say he flew his small plane from Indiana that day, put it on autopilot and jumped out over Alabama after calling emergency officials to say the plane was having mechanical problems.

"I have no memory of any of it - not going to the airport, being in the air, nothing," the newspaper quoted him as saying. "It's just crazy. I've never even jumped out of a plane before. I sit here and stare and the walls and wonder what happened and say, 'How did I get here?'."

Schrenker told the newspaper his last memory is of attending his stepfather's funeral on Dec. 9 and said he had been receiving psychiatric care and taking medication for a year.

Also on Friday, federal prosecutors in Florida asked a judge to consider additional mental evaluations of Schrenker. The move comes a day after a first evaluation was ordered to determine whether he's fit to stand trial.

Two days after his plane crashed, Schrenker was arrested at a remote Panhandle campground where he was drifting in and out of consciousness after slashing his wrist and losing blood.

Federal authorities in Florida have charged him with intentionally crashing the plane in an apparent scheme to fake his own death and escape financial ruin. He also charged with placing false distress calls. In Indiana, he faces a host of charges related to his financial dealings.

An administrative law judge permanently revoked Schrenker's Indiana insurance license on Friday. Although Schrenker voluntarily surrendered his Indiana licenses last summer, authorities also sought to permanently take them away.

Attempts by The Associated Press to reach Schrenker at the jail and through the Escambia County Sheriff's Office were not successful. The federal public defender's office also did not return a telephone call.

Pilot mystery

Powered by WorldNow
Links to the FCC website to view WTHR and/or WALV’s on-line public inspection files:
WTHR: https://stations.fcc.gov/station-profile/WTHR   ||   WALV: https://stations.fcc.gov/station-profile/WALV
Individuals with disabilities may contact Jill Pursell at publicfile@wthr.com, or 317.655.5602, for assistance with access to the public inspection files.
Powered by WorldNowAll content © Copyright 2000 - 2013 WorldNow and WTHR. For more information on this site, please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.