Skip to content

menu

Open Legal Blog Archive logo
HomeAboutBlogsFAQsSubmit

Jailing Pilots for “Negligence” Does Not Improve Safety

By Mike Danko on April 7, 2009

Two years ago, a Garuda Airlines 737 pilot botched a landing at Indonesia’s Yogyakarta airport.  The plane crashed and 21 people were killed.  Many more were injured.

Indonesia’s legal system focuses more on punishing the careless than on compensating the victims.  So, yesterday, the pilot was found “guilty of negligence” and sentenced to two years in prison.

While criminalizing negligence might seem like the “right” thing to do, it just doesn’t work to improve safety.  Indonesia’s abysmal safety record is proof.

The US legal system does not send careless pilots to jail. Instead, it requires the careless pilot’s employer to compensate the victims. The US system gives the airlines a monetary incentive to control the performance of their crews by training, evaluating and then retraining as necessary.  And that is one reason why we have the safest airlines in the world.

  • Posted in:
    Personal Injury
  • Blog:
    Aviation Law Monitor
  • Organization:
    Danko Meredith
  • Article: View Original Source

Open Legal Blog Archive, Inc. logo
Seattle, Washington
Copyright © 2026, Open Legal Blog Archive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Law blog design & platform by LexBlog LexBlog Logo