Originally Posted by
MickG0105
Again, there is not a scintilla of evidence – apart from a fictionalisation of public hearing portrayed in a movie - to support that contention. What is notable is that there was essentially no commentary on the NTSB’s handling of the matter until the movie was released.
I''m not sure if this comment is referring to the point of the crew being questioned by non-NTSB people, or the crew getting the rough end of the pineapple while doing so.
In the event it's the former, as part of NTSB investigations and the subsequent dockets, there
certainly are non-NTSB people who will question the crew as part of an "NTSB" investigation. One that stands out (for me) was the crew of a BNSF coal train that hit
a barge of all things, who were subsequently interrogated by two members of the US
Coast Guard as part of the "NTSB" investigation...If you were to tell me that I'm going to go to work today and I'll be interviewed by Marine Rescue tomorrow because of some screwup on the railway line at Wondabyne, I'd try to have you committed, but that's precisely what happened over there ->>.