The location used by the NYPD to inspect helicopters was an open-air helipad owned by an aviation company in Northwest New York.
The scale of the company was very large. The helipad and hangar alone could park hundreds of helicopters.
Besides that, the company had purchased dozens of helicopters of various types. It was the largest aviation company in New York and was the Rothschild family's asset.
Helicopters were relatively common in the United States. Many wealthy people and corporations owned helicopters. The helicopter rental business was also very popular. Many celebrities, politicians, and wealthy people often rented helicopters for their travels, making aviation companies quite common in the country.
However, most companies or business owners had only one helicopter. It was not worth investing in dedicated facilities and teams just for parking, maintenance, and upkeep of a single helicopter. Thus, they often entrusted the helicopter to an aviation company, which managed the operation and maintenance. When the helicopter was not utilized by the owner, the company would use it for leasing operations to recover costs.
To ensure that the blockade inspection of the helicopters was foolproof, the Rothschild family had provided this venue for the NYPD as well as arranged for the family's team to participate in the whole process. Every helicopter leaving New York airspace had to first undergo a comprehensive inspection here. After confirming that the helicopter had no connection to the Four-Sided Treasure Tower, the NYPD would release the helicopter, and the pilot could continue his journey to his destination.
Nevertheless, in order to prevent the helicopter that had passed the inspection from landing midway, they would require the helicopter to ascend directly to more than one thousand meters on the spot after the inspection. Moreover, the helicopter's altitude must not be lower than one thousand meters during the whole trip. There would be radar surveillance by air traffic control. No one could violate the requirements, or the NYPD would instigate another inspection and investigation.
Despite the fact that the 400-year-old Fleur was the British Lord of the Qing Eliminating Society and a master of cultivation, she would have to go through the aforementioned procedures if she intended to leave New York by helicopter.
Fleur was utterly agitated, feeling as if she had been attacked mentally and physically.
At this point, she was on the verge of collapse.
The dignified leader of the Qing Eliminating Society had been ordered to land in the United States for inspection. She felt like an almighty mafia boss who had one day been reduced to a starving beggar who had to beg for food and spare change!

VERIFYCAPTCHA_LABEL
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Man in Power After Being Married into Her Family