USA TODAY US Edition

Senators question Boeing CEO on 737 Max

Cruz: Pilot’s messages about safety ‘stunning’

- Chris Woodyard

Boeing’s CEO defended the aerospace company’s safety inspection system in Senate testimony Wednesday, despite two crashes that have grounded its 737 Max jetliner.

Overall, however, CEO Dennis Muilenburg took an apologetic stance before the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transporta­tion Committee. The hearing was attended by family members of the 346 people who lost their lives in the crashes. They stood at one point to show large photos of their deceased relatives.

Not only will the 737 Max not fly again until all agree it is safe, Muilenburg said, but Boeing also is reviewing all its safety policies.

“On behalf of myself and the Boeing Company, we are deeply and truly sorry. As a husband and father myself, I am heartbroke­n by your losses. I think about you and your loved ones every day, and the entire Boeing team does as well,” he said.

But when pressed on specifics by senators, Muilenburg took a harder line.

He denied knowing until recently the specifics of an electronic message from a Boeing test pilot, which talked about unknowingl­y lying to regulators and disclosed “egregious” problems with the Max’s flight control system. The company turned the messages over to the Justice Department in February, but didn’t share it with the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and the Senate committee until recently.

Safety is ingrained in the culture at Boeing, the CEO repeatedly said. But Sen. Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, pressed him about the 2016 message exchange.

“This exchange is stunning,” Cruz said, adding that he was aghast that the exchange wasn’t shared earlier.

Muilenburg said he was made aware of the messages earlier this year, but didn’t learn the details until recently. He said the pilot has left Boeing and the only communicat­ion with him has been through his lawyer. “I fully support diving deep into this and understand­ing what he meant,” Muilenberg said.

 ?? ERIC P KRUSZEWSKI FOR USA TODAY ?? Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg appears before a Senate hearing Tuesday.
ERIC P KRUSZEWSKI FOR USA TODAY Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg appears before a Senate hearing Tuesday.

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