American pilot and influencing, freed from Chilean Air Base in Antarctica

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US pilot Ethan Goo has been released from a Chilean air base in Antarctica after being detained for two months because of an allegedly illegal landing on his aircraft on the territory of the country.

The 20 -year -old G -n Guo was released on Saturday. He was convicted to pay a donation of $ 30,000 (22,332 British pounds) and was banned from entering Chilean territory for three years.

The young pilot and influence is accused of landing his plane without permission after giving employees a false flight plan as he undertakes a solo trip to all seven continents to raise money for cancer examination.

G -n Guo is doing “pretty well,” his lawyer Haime Barientos Ramirez told CBS News on the BBC As As Partner CBS News.

“Of course, we do not agree with the legal process open against him, but he is already closed as dismissal,” his lawyer said, as CBS News reports.

He is expected to donate his punishment for childhood cancer within 30 days. He should also leave the country as soon as possible.

BBC contacted the Barrientos Ramírez for comment.

Ethan Goo was 19 years old when he began his trip to become the youngest man who flies solo on each continent, and at the same time hoped to raise $ 1 million (740,300 British pounds) for a cancer study through St. Jude Children’s Hospital in Memphis.

Having already visited six of seven continents, in June, he flies with his small Cessna 182Q plane from the city of Punta Arena, near the most southern point of Chile, to King George Island off the Atlantic coast.

The island was stated by Chile and named King George III of the United Kingdom.

G -n Guo, who was originally from Tennessee, was removed after landing on the island, which is home to a number of international research stations and their staff.

Authorities said he had presented a plan for flying over Punta Arenas, but not then, according to CBS News, the US partner of the BBC.

He was accused of June 29, claiming that he had provided incorrect information about land control and landing without permission, but they were dropped by a judge last month.

Earlier, he stated that he wanted to continue his original mission, once he could leave the military base.

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