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Boeing 737 MAX crash victims' families say they fear the aircraft flying again

9:24
Families of Boeing 737 MAX crash victims recall horrific 2019 crash: Part 1
ABC News
ByJinsol Jung, Joseph Rhee, and Gerry Wagschal
November 25, 2020, 11:17 AM

Despite the recent recertification of Boeing’s 737 MAX 8 by the Federal Aviation Administration, some are still skeptical about the safety of the airplane.

The Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft had been grounded since 2019 when it was implicated in two crashes that killed 346 people.

Even with the FAA’s approval, some of the family members of those who died in the crashes are not only wary of getting on the 737 MAX, but other Boeing planes as well.

Nadia Milleron and Michael Stumo lost their daughter, Samya Stumo in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 on March 10, 2019. The 24-year-old had been on a business trip to East Africa, where she planned to help set up new offices for her employer.

Nadia Stumo (upper left) is seen here with her two brothers and her parents in this family photo.
Stumo family

Her parents say they will never get on a 737 MAX.

“We will warn every single person we know to look at the equipment that they are flying on and make sure that they don't fly on a 737 MAX. We would continue that for other problematic new planes that Boeing produces,” said Milleron.

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One Russian mother, Elena Anokhina, lost her daughter and son-in-law, in the Ethiopian Airlines crash. She told ABC News in Russian, “I wouldn’t recommend to anyone in my family to fly with these Boeing MAX aircraft.”

Ekaterina Polyakova and her husband Aleksandr Polyakova had been on vacation and they wanted to visit Kenya to see its national parks, according to Anokhina.

Other family members of the crash victims are concerned that the overall culture at Boeing could affect the production of its other planes, not just the 737 MAX.

“I will never enter the MAX, even when it enters service again. I would advise anybody never to enter that MAX,” said Tom Kabau.

Kabau lost his brother, George Kabau, on Ethopian Airlines flight 302. George Kabau, 29, was an electrical engineer at General Electric on his way back home from a business trip.

George Kabau at Chania Falls in Aberdare Ranges Park, Kenya, in August 2018.
Courtesy Tom Kabau

“The other concern is, we ask ourselves, this is what happened to the MAX, could this have happened to other planes? Could that attitude also have affected the assembling of other Boeing planes?” said Kabau.

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MORE: House committee final report says Boeing, FAA failures to blame for deadly 737 MAX crashes

Captain Dennis Tajer, an American Airlines 737 pilot and a spokesperson for the Allied Pilots Association, told ABC News that he’s concerned that the same regulatory system that re-certified the MAX is the same one that let it fly in the first place.

Capt. Dennis Tajer, an American Airlines 737 pilot and a spokesperson for the Allied Pilots Association, is seen here during an ABC News interview.
ABC News

“We have to just keep watching. The system needs to be reformed, restructured, pick your R-word. It didn't work. It failed,” said Tajer.

In a statement to "20/20," Boeing said it had "cooperated fully with government and regulatory reviews and also have made a series of meaningful changes to strengthen our company’s safety practices and culture.”

"On November 18, 2020, the FAA lifted the order that suspended operation of 737-8s and 737-9s. The agency’s action validated that with the approved software update, additional pilot training and other defined steps, the newest member of the 737 family is safe and ready to fly," Boeing's statement continued. "We have full confidence in its safety."

American Airlines was one of the first airlines to announce an upcoming 737 MAX flight. The route is scheduled to take place on Dec. 29, 2020, from Miami to New York City.

“If a customer doesn’t want to fly on the 737 MAX, they won’t have to. Our customers will be able to easily identify whether they are traveling on one, even if schedules change. If a customer prefers to not fly on this aircraft, we’ll provide flexibility to ensure they can be easily re-accommodated,” American Airlines announced in a press release.

One former Boeing engineer, Peter Lemme, told ABC News he understands why people would be hesitant to fly on the 737 MAX.

Peter Lemme, a former Boeing engineer, talks about the 737 Max aircraft. After the aircraft was recertified to fly in November 2020, he believes it's now safe to fly again.
ABC News

“When an airplane crashes because it wasn't designed well, that just doesn't sit well and it makes you ask questions as to what else wasn't designed well, and that gets to confidence. And how do you ever get that back?” said Lemme.

Lemme did not work on the 737 MAX, having left Boeing in 1997, but he believes the aircraft is now safe.

“I'm happy to fly on the 737. I have no issue about that, and I think it's going to be a great airplane. I really do,” he said.

The U.S. House of Representatives is scheduled to vote next week on a bill that aims to increase the FAA’s aircraft oversight, a measure stemming from criticism that regulators gave too much power to Boeing when the agency originally reviewed and ultimately approved the 737 MAX.

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