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Unhooking a Boeing door: passengers may be victims of a crime, according to the FBI

2024-03-23T00:15:47.043Z

Highlights: The FBI is investigating a January 5 incident in which a Boeing door came loose on a plane. No one was seriously injured, but the 737 MAX 9 had to make an emergency landing. Images of the terrified passengers sitting next to the gaping hole in mid-flight went viral around the world. Several bolts supposed to secure the cap holder were missing, according to the American Transportation Safety Agency (NTSB), which blamed Boeing. The aircraft manufacturer was particularly criticized for the slowness of its cooperation with the authorities.


At the beginning of March, the American Department of Justice had already announced that it was opening a criminal investigation into this spectacular incident which occurred on January 5.


Passengers on board a Boeing whose door came loose mid-flight may have been victims of a crime, according to the FBI, US media reported on Friday.

At the beginning of March, the Ministry of Justice had already announced that it was opening a criminal investigation into this spectacular incident which occurred on January 5, when a

“door stopper”

(a metal panel placed in a place capable of accommodating a door) is detached from the fuselage of an Alaska Airlines plane.

No one was seriously injured, but the 737 MAX 9 had to make an emergency landing.

Images of the terrified passengers sitting next to the gaping hole in mid-flight went viral around the world.

The passengers recently received a letter from the FBI, which is investigating the matter, according to the Seattle Times.

“I am contacting you because we have identified you as a possible victim of a crime

,” wrote an American federal police agent in this document.

Boeing's slowness criticized

Read alsoBoeing expects to see its operational loss widen in the first quarter

“A criminal investigation can be a long-term undertaking and, for several reasons, we cannot inform you of its progress at this time

,” he adds.

Several bolts supposed to secure the cap holder were missing, according to the American Transportation Safety Agency (NTSB), which blamed Boeing.

The aircraft manufacturer was particularly criticized for the slowness of its cooperation with the authorities.

In early March, the NTSB explained that it had not received certain important documents, and that the company had still not provided the names of the employees who worked on the part in question.

“It is absurd that two months later, we do not have this information

,” denounced the president of the NTSB, Jennifer Homendy, to American parliamentarians.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2024-03-23

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