Air Canada Captain uses fraudulent pilot’s licence for 17 years, before being caught

Air Canada Captain flew 900 flights without required licence. Photo: Unsplash

IBNS-CMEDIA: A former Air Canada captain is facing criminal charges after allegedly flying tens of thousands of passengers over nearly 17 years using a fraudulent pilot’s licence, according to Canadian authorities.

A former Air Canada captain is facing criminal charges after allegedly flying tens of thousands of passengers over nearly 17 years using a fraudulent pilot’s licence, according to Canadian authorities.

Investigators with the Peel Regional Police Fraud Bureau have arrested and charged the former Air Canada captain following a four-month fraud and forgery investigation.

  He has been identified as Geoffrey Wall, who was arrested on June 1.

He has been charged with the offences, including fraud over $5,000, uttering forged documents, possession of counterfeit marks, and public mischief.

The arrest was made months later, in January 2026, when a criminal investigation, known as Project Icarus, was launched after Transport Canada initiated a regulatory review of the licensing credentials and conduct of a commercial airline captain.

“The subsequent police investigation revealed that the accused allegedly used fraudulent pilot licences during his career and service as a captain,” the police said in a statement.

Through the execution of a residential search warrant and other judicial authorizations, investigators, police said, obtained evidence indicating the accused allegedly deceived both his employer, Air Canada, and the federal civil aviation regulator, Transport Canada.

Peel Regional Police will announce the results of Project Icarus, a complex fraud investigation involving a former airline captain who allegedly flew hundreds of flights without the necessary licence. https://t.co/r43y9M2vAv— Peel Regional Police (@PeelPolice) June 9, 2026

The accused retired from Air Canada in 2025 after a 27-year career, prior to the initiation of both the regulatory and criminal investigations.

Police said between 2009 and 2025, he was assigned to more than 900 domestic and international flights as a captain and earned over $2.9 million in salary. 

Records indicate that while Wall possessed a Commercial Pilot Licence (CPL-A), he did not hold the required Airline Transport Pilot Licence (ATPL-A) necessary to operate aircraft, including a Boeing 777, as a captain, police said.

Throughout his career, Wall also held several positions with the Air Canada Pilots Association (ACPA), including serving as Chair of the Master Executive Council, the governing body of the ACPA.

“This case is deeply concerning and strikes at the heart of public trust and safety, as the accused is alleged to have put hundreds of thousands of passengers at risk across more than 900 domestic and international flights. I want to recognise our investigators for their hard work throughout this complex investigation, as well as Transport Canada and Air Canada for their cooperation. Peel Regional Police remains committed to protecting the public and holding individuals accountable for their actions,” Chief Nishan Duraiappah, Peel Regional Police, said.

Reacting to the development, Air Canada said in a statement as quoted by CNN, ” Safety was not compromised by this incident because all pilots at Air Canada undergo mandatory recurrent training every six months to validate their flying competency, including a flight check with a certified Transport Canada check-pilot every 12 months.”

The statement further said: ” However, appropriate licensing is an essential layer of the airline industry’s multi-layered approach to safety, so Air Canada takes this matter with utmost seriousness.”