The last four minutes of data before the disaster which killed 179 people are missing, transport authorities say.
Authorities have said black boxes holding the flight data and cockpit voice recorders stopped recording around four minutes ...
The missing data deepens the puzzle of what caused the deadly air disaster in Muan, South Korea, late last month.
The two black boxes on the Boeing jet involved in the worst aviation disaster on South Korean soil stopped recording about ...
South Korean and United States investigators are still probing the cause of the crash of Jeju Air flight 2216.
South Korea’s leading low-cost carrier, heavy with debt and its stock already near record lows, is now facing intense public ...
The damaged flight data recorder had been deemed unrecoverable for data extraction by South Korean authorities, who sent it ...
Two people, both flight attendants, are the only survivors of the crash and are being treated at South Korean hospitals.
Before it suffered the deadliest crash in South Korea's history, budget airline Jeju Air was moving fast: racking up record ...
Authorities in South Korea were working on Monday to confirm the identities of more than three dozen of the 179 passengers ...
South Korean officials sent the voice recorder to be analyzed at an NTSB lab in the US after they discovered data was missing ...