The Missouri Air National Guard pilot who narrowly escaped as his F-15C fighter broke apart in midair last fall has filed a lawsuit, according to various news reports, against Boeing, which absorbed McDonnell Douglas, the original maker of the F-15. Maj. Stephen Stilwell ejected, but reportedly sustained serious injuries from the violent actions of his aircraft as it broke in half. The Air Force grounded its F-15 fleet, putting all Eagles through a rigorous inspection process once it identified the likely problem as defective longerons. Air Combat Command boss Gen. John Corley said in January that it would be very difficult to assign blame in this case, mainly because documentation for such old aircraft is long gone and the aircraft parts have been subjected to many more years’ worth of stress than originally intended.
President Donald Trump on July 4 signed into law $150 billion in defense funds as part of the tax-and-spending package known as the “One Big, Beautiful Bill” after congressional Republicans approved the legislation in narrow, drawn-out votes earlier this week.