Levine and
Giuseppe Mario Bellanca formed the
Columbia Aircraft Company. Levine hired pilots
Bert Acosta,
Erroll Boyd,
John Wycliff Isemann,
Burr Leyson, and
Roger Q. Williams at $200 a week to perform a series of publicity record attempts for the company. Levine entered the competition for the
Orteig Prize for the first person to complete a nonstop flight from New York to Paris. His
Bellanca designed prototype aircraft, named
Columbia, was ready for weeks, The co-pilot for the effort,
Lloyd W. Bertaud, was displaced to accommodate Levine and went to court to be reinstated. Levine got the order lifted just hours after
Charles Lindbergh, in the
Spirit of St. Louis, had left
Roosevelt Field on
Long Island. Levine's plane was still in its hangar at the same airport. Lindbergh won the prize on May 20, 1927. The following day Levine announced that his airplane would fly farther on a $15,000 transatlantic flight challenge from America to Germany and carry a passenger. The pilot was
Clarence Chamberlin, and Levine would be the passenger. In an oft-repeated ploy, Levine told his wife he was just going up for a test flight. His lawyer notified her by a letter of his intentions after they took off and kept going. On June 4, 1927, the
Columbia took off on its transatlantic flight from America to
Berlin, Germany with Levine as the first passenger to cross the Atlantic in an airplane. The
Columbia landed 100 miles short of Berlin in a field at
Eisleben, Germany. The trip was 315 miles (507 km), and 9 hours 6 minutes longer than Lindbergh's transatlantic crossing. Levine returned to the United States in October 1927, landing in New York City on October 16 by way of the steam ship, Leviathan. Bertaud separately vowed to complete a transatlantic flight without Levine. In September 1927, Bertaud's Hearst-financed
Fokker monoplane
Old Glory crashed in the Atlantic on the attempt, killing Bertaud and the other two men on the flight. While Levine was in France following the record flight from New York,
Mabel Boll "the Queen of Diamonds" tried to persuade him to fly her to America in the
Columbia. Levine had plans to fly it back to America with a French pilot,
Maurice Drouhin. The flight to America was cancelled. Drouhin was owed a $4,000 cancellation fee and had the Columbia guarded against leaving as a precaution. The inexperienced pilot Levine took off for England, claiming to the guards he was just testing the engine. Boll followed Levine to England by boat, talking Levine into letting her be a passenger. Just before the flight, Levine's new pilot Capt. Hinchcliffe, publicly refused to let Boll fly along. Boll was invited to try an east-west flight from America, and she set out for New York by boat in January 1928.. Before their departure, Levine and Hinchliffe appeared in a short film made at
Clapham Studios in London made in the DeForest
Phonofilm sound-on-film system. In the summer of 1928 Levine purchased a customized long-range
Junkers W 33 for
US$50,000, emblazoned "Queen of the Air" across the sides, for Boll's nickname. Plans were made for
Bert Acosta to fly Boll and Levine from Paris to New York for a new record, which was changed to a London–New York attempt. The flight was never made. "The Queen of the Air" Junkers was transported back to America, damaged, and resold to William Rody for another transatlantic attempt. ==Troubles with the law==