Grab the Airplane and Go
How to repossess an airliner without getting shot, or thrown in jail, or beat up, or slammed into a wall, or...
- By Stephen Joiner
- Air & Space magazine, May 2010
Kevin Lacey, here with a repossessed Citation VII, gets the job done by striking an effective balance between folksy and wily.
Courtesy Sage-Popovich Inc.
“What year did we snatch the president of the Congo’s airplane?” Nick Popovich asks. Outside, chilly rain soaks the pastures of his rolling Indiana country estate. From a pond with a gushing fountain, waterfowl honk faintly.
An assistant rifles through records as Popovich assures me cheerfully, “We're not going back to central Africa soon. There’s still a death warrant out for me.”
Driving to Valparaiso on a two-lane blacktop, I saw only a sign with the name of Popovich’s horse farm. But once I turned off the road, drove up the driveway, and entered this opulent ranch-style residence, I found a global operation ticking with the stealthy clockwork of a CIA front. From these headquarters, Popovich plots to repossess some of the world’s largest aircraft. If you’ve been leasing a $150 million jumbo jet and missed a few payments recently, you might want to glance outside and make sure it’s still there.
Popovich once flew everything from DC-8s to a Braniff Airways 747. Looking at this intense, bearded man, who favors loose-fitting flowered shirts, I had a hard time picturing him in a blue suit with braid on the sleeves, filing flight plans at a corporate hub. “I felt like a bus driver,” he says. Offered a share in a Caribbean startup, he bailed on the big airlines and plunged into the shark tank of small charter ops. Some requisite financial wrangling left him owing a favor to a U.S. bank. One day in 1979, the bankers called to collect: A Sri Lankan airline was in default on two 747s, and the banker asked Popovich to bring them home.
He recruited some pilot friends and ad-libbed a grab of the colossal aircraft. Afterward, the banker advised him that for his next repo, he should charge three times as much. Popovich never looked back. He formed Sage-Popovich, Inc. (Sage is the surname of his now-ex wife), and the company has gone on to seize more than 1,200 airliners. “When times are bad,” Popovich says, “it’s good for us.”
The company is brought in when the dunning has run its course—the bank has sent all the official warnings, and the airline has been through the default process. It’s surprising how commonly airliners get behind the eight ball, says Al Nigro. For 25 years Nigro managed leasing and financing of commercial aircraft at institutions like Bank of America and Deutsche Bank; he used to hire Popovich, and now he works for him as his vice president. “If an airline has a weak summer travel season,” says Nigro, “you can pretty well predict they’re going to struggle through the winter and may fall behind on their payments.” Maybe a new competitor is sapping market share, or a plane-buying binge has left a carrier with a fiscal morning-after. On the other hand, he adds, “Some of them are just downright crooks. Just because the airplane is physically big, that doesn’t mean the company that’s leasing it is big—or particularly honest.”
Sage-Popovich carries out about 50 recoveries a year, some of multiple aircraft. The most common target are Boeing 737s, but Popovich and his team retrieve everything from 747s to luxury executive jets. Chasing smaller stuff—the “tinker toys”—isn’t cost-efficient for an operation that keeps as many as 60 people in the field at a time.
An airline’s financial failure is messy, dragging down livelihoods and futures. Individual pilots and mechanics idled by a repo do get Popovich’s sympathy (and sometimes offers of temporary employment). But he also says: “It’s just business. It’s just a financial situation.” He and his team scheme airliner repossessions with cool calculation around a glossy mahogany conference table.





Comments (26)
Wow! Fascinating stories! This could easily become the next big reality TV series.
Posted by Barry Burton on March 24,2010 | 02:18 PM
Sounds like the pilot job I've been waiting for. Maybe I can get my resume in along with the hundreds of others.
Posted by CJ on March 25,2010 | 10:16 PM
Amazing stuff, really! Seriously, get a screenwriter together and put this into a Hollywood film -- I'd watch it.
Posted by Matthew Nielsen on March 29,2010 | 07:19 PM
It's in the works as a reality show.
Posted by on March 29,2010 | 01:18 AM
I wish this were a book I could read.
Posted by jm on March 30,2010 | 01:31 PM
I could seriously see this as a show of some sorts.
I read this article with the song 'Aint no rest for the Wicked' by Caged Elephant in the background. Quite appropos I think.
A movie could be made about this.
Posted by on March 30,2010 | 01:35 PM
You think THIS is hard?
I once was hired to assist and expedite the repossession of a railroad passenger car.
Think for a minute about the logistics of repossessing something that needs track to go anywhere.
I had the car rolling into the owner's shop nine hundred miles away at the same instant the party leasing the car called the owner as he discovered the feat.
Posted by Alexander D. Mitchell IV on March 30,2010 | 02:19 PM
Duplicate of the stories a pal used to tell me of planes he repo'd for banks after the S&L collapse.
The one tale I howled over was repossessing a Lear from the Venezuelan military. He humped over from Columbia with native help, lugging extra tires, batteries and other odds and ends not knowing what he'd find when he got there. Upon eyeballing the plane with high powered scopes, it looked pretty good. Tires inflated, etc.
He watched the airfield for about a week, then made his move in the night. The guy flying with him freaked when George taped a live grenade to the yoke. "What the ...?" george says he replied "I'm not spending the rest of my days in a Venezuelan army prison, bro. So let's make sure this works."
They got it fired up, checklisted (sort of, there's was loud and angry accusations back and forth on that point in the retelling) and did not run into opposition until they made the turn at the end of the runway to begin their roll. As they throttled up army jeeps were chasing them, firing and George said it sounded briefly like a hailstorm hitting the plane.
They got airborne, flew as low as nerves would allow and about halfway across the Gulf noticed they were losing av fuel faster than they could sustain. Now, I wasn't there but George and 'this other guy' both swore they flamed out about the time they pancaked into a rice field just over Louisiana where land becomes sea. George said it's not like the movies where the hero is calm and spouting quips afterwards; he had the screaming heebie jeebies when he walked the plane outside and saw how many rounds contacted.
But he got paid, the bank stuck their thumb in the eye of the Venezuelan army or whoever it was and George laid up for about a year in Florida being over-served at a pool side bar. And that was his last repo.
Posted by Jack Mackenzie on March 30,2010 | 03:25 PM
This doesn't sound hard at all. One time I infiltrated an Imperial Star Destroyer and repossessed three dozen artificial body parts from a squadron of Mandalorian mercenaries.
Posted by Boba Fett on March 30,2010 | 03:37 PM
I remember this one time I repossessed a Space Shuttle. NASA was behind on the rent. Pretty hard to fly that thing!
Posted by sklgilerg on March 30,2010 | 03:51 PM
Of course it is in the works as a reality show. Why else would an organization like this go public? To raise awareness.
Posted by Quilly Mammoth on March 30,2010 | 03:55 PM
there was a CSI or NCIS or one of those shows that had this as part of its plot not too long ago.
Posted by Kevin on March 30,2010 | 04:30 PM
How do these fellows actually get into the cockpit? If it's some podunk airstrip in Wherearewestan, that's one thing but at a real Western commercial airport, it's (supposed to be) tough to just stroll around the tarmac. EDITORS' REPLY: They bring papers that fully authorize them to take possession of the aircraft, so they have as much right to be on the tarmac as, say, a crew working for an established airline.
Posted by TheOldMan on March 30,2010 | 04:33 PM
I live in Lake County Indiana and went to school at Valparaiso University. I've driven past that house at least a hundred times, and I've always wondered who owned it.
Posted by Justin on March 30,2010 | 05:19 PM
This is quite amazing stuff!
This puts TruTV's Repo to shambles, literally!
Posted by The One and Only Ridor on April 1,2010 | 05:52 PM
Good article but have I missed a month?
I thought the clocks go forward an hour forward not the calendar a month. EDITORS' REPLY: The article appears in the April/May issue, which we refer to on the cover of the print version as the "May" issue. That allows it to last on the newsstand for the entire two months. "May 1" is just the electronic version of that dating tradition.
Posted by Chris on April 1,2010 | 12:35 AM
I am unaware of any Sri Lankan airline having 747s in 1979. Airlanka had just been formed and only operated two 707s. Airlanka briefly had two 747s in the mid 1980s which later went to Qantas. EDITORS' REPLY: According to Nick Popovich: "There were two that were being placed there pursuant to quasi wet/lease -subservice agreement, but we repo'd them before they went fully operational. Both 747-100s."
Posted by Chris on April 1,2010 | 01:08 AM
A movie was made long ago (like the '70's) about this stuff, probably based on "George"'s story of the dicey repo of the Venezuelan general's personal Learjet.
Dren. I can't find it on IMDB, but my recollection of it is that it starts with a couple of repo cowboys (guys looking not unlike the pic of Mr. Lacey) infiltrating an airfield, lighting the plane, starting to taxi around for takoff, and getting as far in the checklist as "Fuel Quantity" when they discover the tanks are empty. Here come the Jeeps, so they have to hoof it. The rest of the movie involves them figuring out where the keys to the fuel truck are kept, then getting back on the airfield. For the movie's climax, the cowboys 'borrow' the fuel truck, fill the plane, and take off amidst gunfire. They lost fuel, but IIRC made it to safety.
Posted by Mike on April 5,2010 | 09:49 PM
I could easily see this article being turned into a plot for an episode of TNT's "Leverage" series. (Was thinking that even before the term leverage was used in the article.) A series could get repetitious pretty fast, but the first few episodes would be pretty fun.
Posted by Dinsdale on April 7,2010 | 12:11 PM
I'd put down a couple bucks for Sage-Popovich Inc's new bumper sticker: "Fly It Like You Stole It!" ;-)
Posted by Stan Teliczan on April 18,2010 | 01:53 AM
I really can't believe this is actually happening. What does this guy think? If a foreign state tells him he has no authority, he has no authority, period! Going against that decision simply makes him a criminal.
Posted by Richard on January 25,2011 | 04:28 PM
Now I know why the "Ice Pilots" of "Buffalo Airlines" fly the out of date WWII rust buckets! The planes are paid off and not worth s--t if the company goes under....
Posted by Larry on June 26,2011 | 01:47 AM
@Boba Fett: LOL, that's nothing! Last I checked, the Empire doesn't worry too much about lawyers.
Posted by John on March 26,2012 | 08:00 PM
Is this the same as a programme I watched on TV the other night but cannot remember the channel? Bloody brilliant; perhaps he needs another pilot. I'm willing.
Posted by Bryan Hoare on August 22,2012 | 03:11 PM
That's not a Citation VII Mr. Lacey is standing next to in the first photo; that's a Challenger.
Posted by Wiley on November 20,2012 | 12:46 PM
@Larry: Buffalo and crew fly those "rust buckets" because no "modern" airplane has the cahones to do what those old warbirds consider a typical days work!
@Boba Fett: I got the whole ImpStar II.
Posted by Jedi Talen Raith on March 1,2013 | 02:19 AM