Criminalization of Air Disasters

Nothing good comes of criminal prosecutions following air disasters

While such proceedings may satisfy the public’s zeal to punish those responsible, the result is that the flow of information necessary to correct aviation problems dries up over the long term because of the fear that such information will be used for criminal prosecution in the event of accidents.

It is bad enough that manufacturers and airlines now hide what they do, or more importantly what they don’t do, in an effort to escape civil liability for accidents. Criminalization has always been fraught with the specter of witnesses using their Fifth Amendment rights not to incriminate themselves (which has the effect of impeding investigations that might result in safety improvements).

Moreover, public authorities, whether prosecutors or public investigators, do a terrible job at investigating aircraft accidents and are too often the tools of manufacturers and airlines. Plaintiffs’ lawyers do the majority of aircraft accident investigations in the United States and spend far more, examine more intensively and extensively, and take sworn testimony more often to get to the bottom of these accidents. Criminalization will impede, not enhance, these efforts. What we need is more zealous sanctions when airlines and manufacturers hide information from the certifying authorities, distort warnings received from the field and flat out lie during civil proceedings. We need fewer judges who are selected for their promise to deter plaintiffs’ lawsuits; we should go back to hiring judges based on their demonstrated lack of bias and predilection.

This issue has been around for years and is most often discussed in countries where civil litigation does not exist the way it does in the United States. Where there is no suitable vehicle to get to the truth civilly, criminalization is the fall-back position taken out of frustration. The real solution is to expand civil litigation systems in countries that don’t currently have them so that safety is enhanced rather than deterred by the regressive effects of criminalization. 

- Arthur Alan Wolk

General Commentaries

Arthur Wolk

TSA reverses rule against knives

By Arthur Alan Wolk

(March 6, 2013) In an inexplicable move, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has reversed its ban on the carrying of penknives aboard commercial aircraft. [more]

Boeing 787 Needs Fire Suppression
(February 3, 2013) Recent fires, short circuits and thermal runaways of Boeing 787 Lithium Ion batteries demonstrate that Boeing's choice of this technology was misplaced and is a life threatening hazard. [more]

Big Brother is Watching ... Your Flight
The Dept. of Transportation is aware of every movement of every aircraft, including who is on the plane and it is available to anyone with an Internet connection... [more]

As Close as it Gets
It’s time for the passengers to take control of aviation security. The Northwest Airlines near terrorist disaster... [more] 

Repeat Lesson
American Airlines learned yet again that attempting a landing in a thunderstorm is dangerous... [more] 

Three Asleep in the Cockpit
The Captain, The First Officer, and The Department of Homeland Security. [more] 

Hudson River Tragedy
Inadequate Job by the FAA - Nine people dead and everyone is wondering how this could happen... [more] 

One Level of Safety
There is only one level of safety. The problem is the experience level of the pilots... [more]  

Stop Faulting Crew
The flight crew of the Colgan 3407 was blameless for this crash and everyone investigating... [more]

Pilatus PC-12 Crash Stinks
Fourteen people killed in an aircraft that can only carry 10 has the stench of carelessness all over it. Most PC-12s can safely... [more] 

Why Turboprop Aircraft Shouldn’t Fly in Ice
The Continental 3407 crash reminds us of long-forgotten lessons. The reality is that large airplane manufacturers gave up... [more] 

Criminalization of Air Disasters
Nothing good comes of criminal prosecutions following air disasters. While such proceedings may satisfy the public’s zeal... [more] 

The Cure for Carburetor Ice
Carburetor ice has been a problem since airplanes were first invented... [more] 

Change to Advisory Frequency Approved
All too often the pilot switches his primary radio to the advisory frequency without tuning in approach control on the second... [more]

De-Ice or Anti-Ice
A decision that can cost you your life. Aircraft wings and tails have forever been the collectors of enough ice to... [more] 

Illegal Double Engine Failure
NTSB recommends more pilot training... [more] 

Integrity in Government?
How the party system has run amuck at the NTSB... [more] 

NTSB Chairman Fails to Understand
Why privacy relating to cockpit voice recorder tapes deters safety... [more]