Current:Home > ScamsInvestigator says she asked Boeing’s CEO who handled panel that blew off a jet. He couldn’t help her -ProfitPoint
Investigator says she asked Boeing’s CEO who handled panel that blew off a jet. He couldn’t help her
View
Date:2025-04-25 21:00:26
The nation’s chief accident investigator said Wednesday that her agency still doesn’t know who worked on the panel that blew off a jetliner in January and that Boeing’s CEO told her that he couldn’t provide the information because the company has no records about the job.
“The absence of those records will complicate the NTSB’s investigation moving forward,” National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer Homendy wrote in a letter to a Senate committee that is looking into the Jan. 5 accident on a Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines.
Boeing issued a brief statement vowing, as it has many times, to support the investigation.
Homendy told senators last week that the NTSB asked Boeing for security-camera footage that might help identify who worked on the panel in September, but was told the video was overwritten after 30 days — months before the blowout.
Boeing said Wednesday that it’s standard company practice to erase video after 30 days.
Homendy’s latest letter to the Senate Commerce Committee was a follow-up to her appearance before the panel last week. Shortly after her testimony ended, Boeing provided names of 25 employees who work on doors at the company’s 737 factory near Seattle.
She said, however, the company still hasn’t said which of the workers removed the panel, which plugs a hole left when extra emergency doors are not required on a plane. She said she even called Boeing CEO David Calhoun.
“He stated he was unable to provide that information and maintained that Boeing has no records of the work being performed,” Homendy wrote. Boeing did not comment on the phone call.
There is a drawback to NTSB’s focus on identifying specific workers, Homendy conceded. She worried that it could discourage people from talking about the matter with investigators, and so she told her staff to protect the identities of Boeing employees who come forward.
veryGood! (876)
Related
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Sydney Sweeney Shares How She and Glen Powell Really Feel About Those Romance Rumors
- Travis Scott to perform in Houston for first time since Astroworld tragedy, mayor's office announces
- Grimes Shares Rare Insight Into Family Life With Elon Musk and Their 2 Kids
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Inside Russia's attempts to hack Ukrainian military operations
- New southern Wisconsin 353 area code goes into effect in September
- Target adding Starbucks to its curbside delivery feature at 1,700 US stores: How to order
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- After decades, a tribe's vision for a new marine sanctuary could be coming true
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- What’s driving Maui’s devastating fires, and how climate change is fueling those conditions
- Norfolk Southern content with minimum safety too often, regulators say after fiery Ohio derailment
- Texas woman Tierra Allen, TikTok's Sassy Trucker, leaves Dubai after arrest for shouting
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Las Vegas food service workers demanding better pay and benefits are set to rally on the Strip
- Batiste agrees to $2.5 million settlement over dry shampoo. How to claim your part.
- Paper exams, chatbot bans: Colleges seek to ‘ChatGPT-proof’ assignments
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Kia has another hit electric vehicle on its hands with 2024 EV9 | Review
Taylor Swift reveals '1989' as next rerecorded album at Eras tour in LA
Special counsel Jack Smith got a secret search warrant for Trump's Twitter account
John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
A lawsuit accuses a Georgia doctor of decapitating a baby during delivery
Biden wants to compensate New Mexico residents sickened by radiation during 1945 nuclear testing
Northwestern football coaches wear 'Cats Against The World' T-shirts amid hazing scandal