Originally Posted by
Excargodog
having been on USAF Class A mishap boards that routinely delivered reports in 30 days, questioning a report taking as long as this one which had:
1. No fatalities/plenty of witnesses to what occurred.
2. Cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder easily recoverable/recovered.
3. ADSB flight path data pretty much instantly retrievable.
4. ATC communications with incident aircraft pretty much instantly retrievable.
5. A mostly intact aircraft just sitting there.
6. An entirely intact ILS.
does not strike me as particularly unreasonable.
This was not a USAF mishap.
The NTSB does not routinely take 30 days. In fact, I don't believe the NTSB has ever taken just 30 days. What you did in the USAF is irrelvant.
There's no conspiracy here. No secret government coverup. Information has been released. The details are known. The players and participants are known.
The NTSB has not made any attempt to hide, conceal, or downplay the event, nor is there any rason why they would, or should, or any indication that the NTSB has done so.
Even the effect this event has had on the career progression of the pilot in command is known, to certain here, and thus, no speculation (or conspiracy theories) are required.