A Boeing 737 MAX 8 is shown on the assembly line. The board ignored red flags about the 737 Max, didn't develop its own tools to evaluate safety, says a court filing. "Prior to the grounding of the 737 Max, the board failed to undertake its own evaluation of the safety of keeping the 737 Max aloft," investors said in an amended Delaware Chancery Court complaint that was made public Feb. 5. Delaware Chancery Court Judge Morgan Zurn agreed to make the suit's details public after concluding the "public interest" in the board's handling of the 737 Max fiasco "favors disclosure." The 737 Max is set to return to European skies this month after being cleared by regulators there as well.
Source: Ethiopian News February 10, 2021 04:37 UTC