sam pegram, sustainability campaignerjoanna toole, and un worker 0liver vick. had crashed into the sea off indonesia in 2018, killing 189 people. the aircraft, a new design, had a fatal flaw. but after the first accident, it was allowed to keep flying. that fact makes sam's brother tom furious. it's corporate greed that has got us to this point. and, you know, itjust killed so many people. it's hard to even, like, wrap my head around the fact that even initially when it did happen, that people weren't up in arms. boeing has admitted responsibility for the crash and paid fines and compensation worth £2.5 billion. but under a deal with the us government, it's immune from further prosecution. that, says the family, is why the inquest matters. it's a chance to be heard, to tell — let people know who sam was, what he stood for, and also to, yeah, publicly in a court hear the wrongdoing that boeing are guilty of. i recently spoke to one of boeing's top executives, and i asked him if he had a message for the bereaved families. we have such deep sympathy and condolence