NTSB Board Member Inman Says He Was Fired by White House

WASHINGTON, March 8 (Reuters) – A Republican ⁠member ⁠of the U.S. National ⁠Transportation Safety Board said on Sunday he was fired ​on Friday by the White House without any explanation.

Todd Inman, a former chief ‌of staff to Transportation Secretary ‌Elaine Chao during President Donald Trump’s first term, had served on ⁠the NTSB ⁠since April 2024. He was the on-scene board member at ​the American Airlines collision with an Army helicopter in January 2025 near Reagan Washington National Airport that killed 67 people and the November crash of a UPS ​cargo plane on takeoff from the Louisville, Kentucky, airport that killed 15 ⁠people.

The ⁠White House did not ⁠immediately respond ​to requests for comment. Inman was removed from the NTSB website on ​Sunday. The NTSB told ⁠senior leaders in an email seen by Reuters that Inman’s position was terminated.

The NTSB declined to comment.

The White House fired then-NTSB Vice Chair Alvin Brown in May. Brown, a Democrat who was the first-ever African American ⁠elected mayor of Jacksonville, Florida, has filed suit challenging his dismissal.

The NTSB ⁠investigates all civil aviation accidents. The board investigates significant accidents in other modes of transportation – highway, marine, pipeline and railroad – and determines the probable cause of accidents and makes safety recommendations.

Inman said serving on the NTSB had been a great honor. “Witnessing these horrible accidents have undoubtedly taken a toll on me and my family and has changed my perspective in a positive way on how ⁠we regulate safety for the traveling public,” Inman said.

Late last month, the Senate confirmed John DeLeeuw, who had been managing director of safety and efficiency for American Airlines and a Boeing 787 captain, to ​fill Brown’s seat on the NTSB.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing ​by Mark Porter and Aurora Ellis)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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