Call to reopen probe into TWA Flight 800
Former investigators allege that inquiry into crash off New York in which 230 people died was compromised by a 'wilful denial of information'
It wasn't a missile, government officials said at the time. Just a tragic accident. It was an explosion in the plane's central fuel tank, they said, that sent TWA Flight 800 plummeting into the Atlantic Ocean in 1996, in a crash that remains one of the world's most devastating airline accidents.
Now, nearly 17 years after the Boeing 747 crashed 15 kilometres off of New York's Long Island, killing all 230 passengers and crew, the missile theory is getting a second look.
Six officials, all of whom participated in the original investigation, announced that they had filed a petition demanding that the US government reopen the investigation.
Breaking a 17-year silence, the six - including former National Transportation Safety Board senior investigator Hank Hughes and former TWA accident investigator Bob Young - alleged that they were forced to cover up original findings and were subjected to manipulation by the FBI during the course of the investigation.