Air France and Airbus not to blame for crash AF447 in 2009
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All on Tue Apr 18 22:05:14 2023
Aircraft manufacturer Airbus and airline Air France are not to blame for a plane crash in 2009, a French court ruled on Monday.
In June 2009, Air France Flight 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, operated by an A330-200, crashed into the Atlantic Ocean after being caught in a storm.
Relatives of the 12 crew members and 216 passengers, all of whom died in the crash, had sued Airbus and Air France for involuntary manslaughter. So-called Pitot speed control tubes froze, preventing the pilots from getting clear speed readings. They lost speed, but did not notice it in time.
The families of the victims and some aviation experts claim that the pilots were insufficiently trained to cope with the loss of speed.
The problem of freezing the Pitot tubes on Airbus A330 aircraft had already been reported by other pilots before the crash. In the months following the accident, these tubes were replaced worldwide. The crash also prompted a review of pilot training protocols.
The judge found that both companies had been negligent on some points. But those cases were not serious enough for a conviction. "A probable causal relationship is not enough," the judges said.
It was the first time that companies had been tried for involuntary manslaughter. The maximum penalty for this is a fine of 225,000 euros.
--- DB4 - 20230201
* Origin: AVIATION ECHO HQ (2:292/854)