Lion Air ends search for 2nd black box from crashed Boeing 737

Lion Air ends search for 2nd black box from crashed Boeing 737
A lawsuit filed in Chicago blames Boeing for the deadly Lion Air crash off the coast of Indonesia that killed all on board, claiming the manufacturer’s airplane was “unreasonably dangerous,” a US law firm announced on December 26, 2018. (AFP/Adek Berry)
Updated 03 January 2019
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Lion Air ends search for 2nd black box from crashed Boeing 737

Lion Air ends search for 2nd black box from crashed Boeing 737
  • The crash was the world’s first for a Boeing Co. 737 MAX jet
  • Lion Air said in December that it was funding a $2.6 million search for the second black box

JAKARTA: Lion Air said on Thursday it had ended its search for the second black box voice recorder from its Boeing 737 MAX jet that crashed into the Java Sea on Oct. 29 killing 198 people.
Contact with flight JT610 was lost 13 minutes after it took off from the capital Jakarta heading north to the tin-mining town of Pangkal Pinang.
The crash was the world’s first for a Boeing Co. 737 MAX jet.
Lion Air said in December that it was funding a $2.6 million search for the second black box, using the offshore supply ship MPV Everest.
Lion Air Group Spokesman Danang Mandala told Reuters on Thursday that the search using the ship had ended on Dec. 29 at 23:59 p.m. local time.