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Boeing CEO restates 'relentless commitment' to safety

In This Article:

  • CEO Dennis Muilenburg says Boeing will maintain its "relentless commitment to make safe airplanes even safer."

  • His comments come after French and Ethiopian investigators said data extracted from the black boxes of the Ethiopian Airlines jet that crashed March 10 showed "clear similarities" with a deadly Lion Air flight that plunged into the Java Sea in October.

Boeing BA CEO Dennis Muilenburg restated the aircraft maker's commitment to safety on Monday night, as concerns grow about the second deadly crash of the manufacturer's top selling Boeing 737 Max planes in less than five months.

The executive said that Boeing will maintain its "relentless commitment to make safe airplanes even safer."

"We also understand and regret the challenges for our customers and the flying public caused by the fleet's grounding," Muilenburg added.

His comments come after French and Ethiopian investigators said data extracted from the black boxes of the Ethiopian Airlines jet that crashed March 10 showed "clear similarities" with a deadly Lion Air flight that plunged into the Java Sea in October.

Aviation authorities around the world grounded the Boeing 737 Max planes last week after the Ethiopian Airlines crash , which killed all 157 people on board.

Boeing and Muilenburg are under increased scrutiny following the two crashes, which killed 346 people. Investigators in the Indonesia crash have indicated the pilots struggled with an automated anti-stall system that Boeing added to the 737 Max planes. That system causes the nose of the plane to point downward, the way airplanes can recover from a stall, but can have catastrophic results if the planes' sensors receive erroneous information.

Many pilots were not aware the system existed until after the Lion Air crash and said they did not receive in-depth training to transition to the Boeing 737 Max from older models of the plane.

Boeing last week said it was working on a software fix for the planes as well as updated pilot training and manuals.

The Wall Street Journal, citing anonymous people familiar with the matter, reported Sunday that a grand jury issued a subpoena to "at least one person" involved in the development of the plane. It said a prosecutor from the criminal division of the Justice Department was listed as a contact. It was also confirmed by a source to CNBC.

The Journal also said that the Transportation Department's watchdog was scrutinizing the FAA's certification of the new 737 planes.

More than 370 of the Boeing 737 Max planes are in airline fleets worldwide and Boeing has more than 4,600 on order.