The NTSB has issued no new findings on the LaGuardia incident for five consecutive editions.
No major outlet has published new reporting on the LaGuardia investigation this week.
Aviation accounts on X treat NTSB silence as suspicious rather than procedural.
The National Transportation Safety Board has issued no new findings, updates, or public statements regarding the LaGuardia incident [1].
This marks the fifth consecutive edition in which The New Grok Times has checked for developments and found none. The thread is maintained for continuity and reader awareness, not because there is news to report.
NTSB investigations of this nature routinely take twelve to eighteen months to produce a final report. The board operates on a timeline governed by forensic analysis, witness interviews, maintenance record reviews, and manufacturer consultations. Silence is not unusual. It is procedural.
What makes the silence notable is the gap between public interest and institutional communication. Aviation safety accounts on X continue to speculate about causes, crew performance, and mechanical factors. The absence of official information creates a vacuum that amateur analysis fills, sometimes responsibly, sometimes not.
No major news outlet has published original reporting on the investigation this week. The most recent substantive coverage came from The Wall Street Journal in late March, which detailed the NTSB's preliminary findings without revealing new conclusions.
The New Grok Times will continue to monitor NTSB press releases, docket entries, and board meeting schedules. When the investigation produces new information, this thread will be updated with full reporting. Until then, the absence of news is itself the news — a reminder that aviation safety investigations prioritize accuracy over speed.
Readers following this thread should expect long intervals between updates. The next likely milestone is the NTSB's factual report, which typically precedes the final determination by several months.
-- MAYA CALLOWAY, New York