Many people around the world are worried about flying after nearly 350 people were killed in two separate airline disasters less than six months apart.
As new information becomes available, it’s only made the flying public more uneasy.
As Boeing struggles to get its planes back in the air, the manufacturer has been hit with multiple subpoenas as part of a criminal investigation, while its global fleet remains grounded. All this, as families of the victims of the Ethiopian Air crash wait to hear just what went wrong.
CGTN’s Dan Williams reports from Chicago.
Follow Dan Williams on Twitter @DanWilliamsTV
To discuss all of this:
- James Brauchle is a former U.S. Air Force navigator.
- Nawal Taneja is a professor emeritus of the Center for Aviation Studies at Ohio State University.
- Mark Weiss is the president of Weiss Consulting Group and a retired captain with American Airlines.
- Dan McClory is the managing director and Head of China, Boustead Securities.
For more:
Federal prosecutors have issued multiple subpoenas as part of a criminal investigation into Boeing's 737 Max planes, sources say https://t.co/fwoHaGTMw8 pic.twitter.com/SbRbV7BB6a
— CNN Breaking News (@cnnbrk) March 21, 2019
A passenger-less Boeing 737 MAX 8 – the aircraft already under harsh scrutiny – had to make an emergency landing after an engine-related problem, according to the FAA https://t.co/Nz19oaJvi2 pic.twitter.com/Tyya71l5y0
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 27, 2019