geonuc wrote:Reporters don't need technical expertise, or not much anyway. They just need to find the people who do have the right expertise.
Thumper wrote:Interesting, I'll have to check it out. But a test pilot being the only guy in a huge project of a huge organization faulted for a major problem. That sounds fishy. As if NASA would have been able to blame one person for the Apollo 1 fire, or the Challenger disaster. Inconceivable.
No company executive faces imprisonment for the misconduct that the biz has acknowledged. Boeing fired CEO Dennis Muilenburg in late 2019 over the 737 Max accidents and he departed with $62m in compensation.
The Justice Department in October indicted Mark A. Forkner, a former Boeing 737 MAX chief technical pilot, for fraud. The government contends Forkner provided the FAA with false, inaccurate, and incomplete information about MCAS and that led to the misunderstandings that contributed to the two crashes.
grapes wrote:No company executive faces imprisonment for the misconduct that the biz has acknowledged. Boeing fired CEO Dennis Muilenburg in late 2019 over the 737 Max accidents and he departed with $62m in compensation.
The Justice Department in October indicted Mark A. Forkner, a former Boeing 737 MAX chief technical pilot, for fraud. The government contends Forkner provided the FAA with false, inaccurate, and incomplete information about MCAS and that led to the misunderstandings that contributed to the two crashes.
Forkner was chief technical pilot. What exactly is that?
Sigma_Orionis wrote:Boeing Whistleblower report
Thumper wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:Boeing Whistleblower report
I've only read part of the article and unfortunately at least the opening paragraphs are overly simplistic. It laid complete blame for the two crashes on MCAS. And that is false. I hope to read it in it's entirety. But the article was written by a reporter. I realize there is a link to an actual report.
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