NASA used money to settle the Columbia ship
The US Aerospace Agency (NASA) has spent more than $ 26 million on the family of seven astronauts killed after the disaster shuttle Columbia in the secretly concealed settlement for more than two years.
The US Aerospace Agency (NASA) has spent more than $ 26 million on the family of seven astronauts killed after the disaster shuttle Columbia in the secretly concealed settlement for more than two years.
NASA recruited former FBI director William Webster, also a former federal judge, to act as mediator and counsel in the settlement outside this court.
This information was disclosed in a seven-page document to the Orlando Sentinel last month after a newspaper reporter asked for case information in 2005 and 2006 in accordance with the law of freedom of information. state (FOIA).
Columbia shuttle crew (Photo: Xinhuanet)
NASA was criticized for not announcing this arrangement earlier. However, Stephen L. Mcconnell, NASA's freedom of information official, said the agency did not deliberately delay the provision of such information.
In a response to a request from the Orlando Sentinel , NASA spokesman Allard Beutel spoke briefly about the settlement, citing the reasons for ensuring astronaut family privacy.
He said the settlement was taken from NASA's budget. However, Steven Aftergood, director of the secret government project of the American Association of Scientists, doesn't think so.'It's not NASA money. That's people's money, ' he said.
The disaster shuttle Columbia happened on 1-2-2003 when the ship broke down when returning to Earth. An investigation identified the ship's insulated foam pieces that damaged the ship's left wing, resulting in the death of all seven astronauts (including 6 Americans and 1 Israeli).
WALL VY
- Microsoft lost money to settle litigation
- People can settle on the Moon in 2022
- Last minute on space shuttle Columbia
- 9 rules everyone needs to know about money
- NASA lacks money to track meteors
- Found technical errors in shuttle Columbia and Discovery
- The family gave birth to a girl after 137 years of having a son
- For the first time in life people have the opportunity to see the Titanic under the ocean
- Proud of the second Vietnamese to fly into space
- Out of money makes you old and smart
Scientists discover a photon traveling back in time Is the moon also affected by the Covid-19 epidemic? NASA shuts down plasma device to save spacecraft 20.5 billion kilometers away Surprised to know the identity of the Russian missile debris 'hunter' A giant meteorite once crashed into Earth, 200 times larger than the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs. Discovery suggests: Earth may escape after Sun turns into red giant ESA launches Hera spacecraft to study how to protect Earth A star will explode in 2024, visible to the naked eye