How Boeing's Responsibility in a Deadly Crash 'Got Buried'
Source: New York Times
How Boeings Responsibility in a Deadly Crash Got Buried
By Chris Hamby
Jan. 20, 2020
Updated 5:15 p.m. ET
After a Boeing 737 crashed near Amsterdam more than a decade ago, the Dutch investigators focused blame on the pilots for failing to react properly when an automated system malfunctioned and caused the plane to plummet into a field, killing nine people.
The fault was hardly the crews alone, however. Decisions by Boeing, including risky design choices and faulty safety assessments, also contributed to the accident on the Turkish Airlines flight. But the Dutch Safety Board either excluded or played down criticisms of the manufacturer in its final report after pushback from a team of Americans that included Boeing and federal safety officials, documents and interviews show.
The crash, in February 2009, involved a predecessor to Boeings 737 Max, the plane that was grounded last year after accidents in Indonesia and Ethiopia killed 346 people and hurled the company into the worst crisis in its history.
A review by The New York Times of evidence from the 2009 accident, some of it previously confidential, reveals striking parallels with the recent crashes and resistance by the team of Americans to a full airing of findings that later proved relevant to the Max.
In the 2009 and Max accidents, for example, the failure of a single sensor caused systems to misfire, with catastrophic results, and Boeing had not provided pilots with information that could have helped them react to the malfunction. The earlier accident represents such a sentinel event that was never taken seriously, said Sidney Dekker, an aviation safety expert who was commissioned by the Dutch Safety Board to analyze the crash.
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Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/business/boeing-737-accidents.html