The NTSB apologized for "inaccurate and offensive" names, which said incorrectly confirmed by internal summer. A government official with knowledge of the situation said Monday challenger the interior is no longer with the agency.
"Earlier today, in response to an inquiry from a media outlet, a summer internal acted outside the scope of his authority wrongly confirmed the names of the flight crew on the aircraft," the NTSB said Friday in a statement. Paulson noted that the real names of the pilots were not in the news report. "Where's the real harm? Yes, it was taste and undoubtedly caused some short-term emotional distress, but nothing that rises to the level of litigation, "he said. NTSB: 2 pilots call Asiana landing to be aborted was not immediately clear who produced the fake names, but the NTSB said it was not the interior. "The names were presented, from the station, the internal confirmation," NTSB spokeswoman Kelly Nantel said. "The internal making and provide names to the station." The NTSB said it does not exempt or confirm the identities of the crew or other persons involved in transport accidents. "We work hard to ensure that adequate factual challenger information regarding the investigation is released and deeply regret today's incident," the NTSB statement said. The NTSB did not identify the interior, but said, "will take appropriate actions to ensure that such a substantial error is not repeated." Asiana pilot identify controls of Boeing 777 that undershot its approach and clipped a seawall before crash landing on the runway as Lee Kang-Kuk. There were two other pilots in the cockpit challenger at the time of the accident. Asiana Flight 214 was carrying 291 passengers and 16 crew members when it crash-landed on July 6 on the runway after Seawall found. Three passengers died, including a girl who died of her injuries Friday morning. More than 180 others were injured. Asiana Airlines says it will proceed with its planned lawsuit against Oakland, California, television station, but it is not going to pursue legal action against the National Board of Transport Security. Over the weekend, the Korean line has said it will sue both entities after internal NTSB confirmed wrong "inaccurate and offensive" names such as pilot of Flight 214, which crash-landed nine days ago in San Francisco International Airport. The fictitious names phonetically defined phrases like "something bad" and "We Too Low" were read during the afternoon KTVU broadcast Friday. The airline called the report "humiliation" and said it was "reviewing possible legal action." On Monday morning, the line seemed to have a partial change of heart, at least on the NTSB. Korea react to Asia pilot names filing false suit against challenger TV station Asiana The final moments of Flight 214 crash victim dies 214 Third Asiana Airline spokesman Na Chul-hee said Asiana US law firm retained to file defamation claim against TV station. But, he said, the company did not plan to file a separate suit against the NTSB. "After legal review, the company decided to file a lawsuit against the network because it was their report that resulted in damaging the company's image," he said. KTVU anchor Tori Campbell read the names Friday. The news station, CNN affiliate, later apologized on air and on its website. "We sincerely regret the mistake and took immediate action to apologize, both in the newscast where the error occurred, as well as on our website and social media sites," according to Tom Raponi, KTVU / KICU vice president and general manager. "Nothing is more important to us than having the highest level of accuracy and integrity, and we are reviewing our procedures to ensure that this type of mistake does not happen again." The key to a defamation case is to determine whether what was said damages reputation and causing body damage, and care was taken, if any, to prevent that, said Ken Paulson, president of the First Amendment Center and dean of the College of Communication -Massa East Tennessee State University. "It is very difficult to conceive defamation suit prevailing here," he told CNN. "Anyone who heard it understood it was a prank. challenger And as ludicrous report was, at least the news station called to try and check. "KTVU said the names that have been confirmed by official Washington NTSB previously aired.
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