U.S.

Interim Report On Ethiopian Airlines Crash Points Fingers At Boeing

The report says MCAS design, an automated safety feature designed to prevent the plane from stalling, "made it vulnerable to undesired activation."

Interim Report On Ethiopian Airlines Crash Points Fingers At Boeing
AP/Mulugeta Ayene

Investigators say design flaws in the Boeing 737 Max plane are to blame for an Ethiopian Airlines plane crash last year, according to an interim report released Monday. 

The crash killed all 157 people on board who were headed from Ethiopia to Nairobi and happened months after a plane from Lion Air, an Indonesian airline, crashed minutes after takeoff into the Java Sea. The Indonesian crash killed all 189 people on board. Both Boeing planes were brand new.

The report said the Ethiopian jet had a "valid certificate of airworthiness," had no known technical problems before departure and its weight and balance were within the operating limits. 

However, Ethiopian officials found that the speed and altitude alerts did not work. The report also said that an automated safety feature designed to prevent the plane from stalling also failed. A preliminary report released in April showed that the system pushed the nose down based on faulty readings. The plane from Indonesia also had that automated system installed. 

Boeing is facing a $20 million fine from the FAA and lawsuits from families who lost loved ones. It's also facing a class-action lawsuit from pilots who say the company's practices put peoples' lives at risk. 

Additional reporting by the Associated Press.