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This summer, the National Transportation Safety Board will hold a two-day investigative hearing on the Alaska Airlines door plug incident, the agency announced Tuesday.
Last year, an improperly attached door panel flew off of an Alaska Airlines airplane in midair. No one was hurt, but the incident sparked a fresh round of scrutiny for Boeing and the FAA.
The National Transportation Safety Board provided another update Monday night on its investigation into the Alaska Airlines mid-flight incident. Pete Suratos reports.
The National Transportation Safety Board is meeting Tuesday to review the investigation into what led to the failure of a door plug on American Airlines Flight 1282 in 2024.
The plane — used for Ontario, California-bound Alaska Airlines flight 1282 — was a Boeing 737 MAX 9 jetliner, and the incident put Boeing and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) under ...
The National Transportation Safety Board is meeting Tuesday to determine probable cause of the door plug panel blowout that happened mid-air on an Alaska Airlines flight in January of 2024.
US News NTSB send team to probe Alaska Airlines’s gaping hole ‘incident’ that happened mid-flight By Olivia Land Published Jan. 6, 2024, 10:54 a.m. ET ...
The National Transportation Safety Board found Boeing and the FAA responsible for "multiple system failures," leading to Alaska Airlines' door blowing off mid-flight last year near Portland, Oregon.
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