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Lawyer of Ethiopia plane crash victims seek documents on 737 Max

Wednesday September 18 2019
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The crash site of the Ethiopian Airlines operated Boeing 737 Max on March 14, 2019. A lawyer representing relatives of victims killed in the crash said on September 17, 2019 that he is seeking documents from Boeing and US regulators on the decision not to ground the aircraft after a previous deadly accident. PHOTO | TONY KARUMBA | AFP

By AFP

NEW YORK,

A lawyer representing relatives of victims killed in an Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max crash said Tuesday he is seeking documents from manufacturer Boeing and US regulators on the decision not to ground the aircraft after a previous deadly accident.

The October 2018 crash of a Lion Air 737 Max in Indonesia killed 189 people, while 157 died in the accident in Ethiopia five months later.

The Max's MCAS anti-stall system was implicated in both of the crashes.

AIRWORTHINESS

Instead of ordering the grounding of the Max after the Lion Air crash, the US Federal Aviation Administration issued an airworthiness directive reminding pilots of emergency procedures.

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It also asked Boeing to provide a fix for the aircraft, which it was still working on at the time of the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

"The decisions to keep those planes in service are key," said Robert Clifford, whose Chicago-based law firm represents Ethiopian Airlines crash victims.

Clifford made the request at a hearing before a Chicago judge.

PROTECTIVE ORDER

The law firm and Boeing "are now working on developing a protective order regarding the production of documents that deal with the design and development of the 737 Max 8," the lawyer said in a statement.

He said the focus was on "what Boeing knew following the Oct. 29 Lion Air crash of the Max 8 in the Java Sea and the MAX 8 crash in Ethiopia just a few months later."

Boeing said in a statement that it was cooperating with investigating authorities, while it declined to comment directly on the lawsuit.

The next hearing is scheduled for October 28, followed by another on November 21.

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