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    Man who warned of Challenger disaster dies at 73

    NEPHI, Utah (AP) — Roger Boisjoly, a NASA contractor who repeatedly voiced concerns about the space shuttle Challenger before it exploded, has died. He was 73.

    Boisjoly died of cancer on Jan. 6 in Nephi, about 40 miles south of Provo, his wife Roberta Boisjoly said.

    The 1986 Challenger tragedy shocked the nation. Seven astronauts, including a schoolteacher, were killed when the shuttle disintegrated 73 seconds after liftoff from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

    Boisjoly, an engineer at rocket-builder Morton Thiokol Inc., warned in 1985 that seals on the booster rocket joints could fail in freezing temperatures.

    "The result would be a catastrophe of the highest order — loss of human life," he wrote in a memo.

    On the eve of the ill-fated flight, Boisjoly and several colleagues reiterated their concerns and argued against launching because of predicted cold weather at the Kennedy Space Center. They were overruled by Morton Thiokol managers, who gave NASA the green light.

    Slow-motion video of the launch showed a tongue of flame sprouting from one of the shuttle's solid rocket boosters, licking the main fuel tank.

    After the accident, Boisjoly testified to a presidential commission investigating the Challenger accident. The group determined that hot gases leaked through a joint in one of the booster rockets shortly after blastoff that ended with the explosion of the shuttle's hydrogen fuel.

    Boisjoly said he was shunned by colleagues and neighbors after emerging as a whistleblower. He took an extended leave of absence while Morton Thiokol worked on a redesign of the rocket joint.

    "When I realized what was happening, it absolutely destroyed me," Boisjoly told The Associated Press in a 1988 telephone interview. "It destroyed my career, my life, everything else. I'm just now getting back to the point where I think I'll be able to work as an engineer again."

    Boisjoly toured the country and spoke about his experience. He received awards from the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers for trying to halt the Challenger launch.

    Roberta Boisjoly said her husband continued to receive emails from students and others about his role.

    "I'm very proud of what he did. It took a lot of courage," she said. "That's who he was. He would do it again."

    Roger Boisjoly was born on April 25, 1938, in Lowell, Mass. He received a degree in mechanical engineering from University of Lowell and was active in the Church of Jesus Christ of LatterDay Saints.

    After 27 years as an aerospace engineer, Boisjoly launched his own business in forensic engineering and lectured at universities.

    He is survived by his wife of 49 years, two daughters and eight grandchildren.

     

    27 comments

    • hubcap_diamond_star_halo  •  Memphis, Tennessee  •  3 mths ago
      It is dangerous to be right when those in power are wrong. Boisjoly is a man who should be lauded and remembered for his courage and refusal to back down from what is right over what "the boss" wants. My gratitude to him for his conviction, and sincere condolences to family and friends.
    • Ah_Geez  •  3 mths ago
      He was "shunned"? By Neighbors? For trying to give reliable data (as it turns out) to higher ups? What a disgusting era we live in when someone trying to save lives is called a "whistleblower" and shunned! Years ago I wrote to newspapers saying the word had too much of a negative connotation to be used as a description for people trying to shed light on unsafe conditions, criminal activities, etc. Their response...it doesn't mean anything negative to us! Well of course not! Why...it sells your news papers...right? Once again, the LCD is money over lives. What does that say for your personal security in this world?
    • MattPeriolat  •  Bowling Green, Kentucky  •  3 mths ago
      And thus, today, we lost a whistle blower who was overuled by upper management to save the bottom line. There is a lesson to be learned in all of this.
      • Rod 3 mths ago
        It's better to be in upper management than to be a whistle blower?
      • Craig 3 mths ago
        It is if upper management can get away with murder and can't be held liable for their actions. Honest people with integrity may lose in this life but will be greeted with open arms in the next. Godspeed Mr. Boisjoly!
      • Storm Shadow 3 mths ago
        Follow the money... and you'll quickly find out whom you can and cannot trust.
    • Not us  •  3 mths ago
      The rewards of doing the right thing and warning of a real danger that took the lifes of the astronauts, a destroyed life and career. Did anyone in the government come to his aid. No one. He should have been promoted and praised and his superiors and some NASA officials put in jail.
    • Susan  •  3 mths ago
      The life scenerio should have been flipped: Mr. Boisjoly should have been the person to continue to work at NASA and Morton Thiokol managers should have been the ones with destroyed careers.
      • John 3 mths ago
        Totally right on.
    • The Ruling Queen  •  3 mths ago
      My prayers go out to Mr. Boisjoly's family. If only every person alive possessed even a smidgen of this man's integrity........
    • SuperG  •  Portland, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      And I guess the managers that gave the green light that killed those people got promoted.
    • dave  •  Montesano, Washington  •  3 mths ago
      Thank You; Roger Boisjoly for having the integrity of blowing a whistle that would have saved many astronauts and a brave teacher; I am sure Morton-Thiokol felt so bad but they got their new contract signed before the liftoff; why the big push!!!
      I truly think that Whistle Blowers should recieve something close to a Nobel Prize; if the concerns of the blown whistle would have saved lives; with a check attached, too. As for his Colleagues; you all should be very ashamed of yourselves; you know what I call you a bunch of Stupid Cowards; you would never work for one of my companies EVER. Dave G
    • Nobama in 2012  •  3 mths ago
      A man of principle, integrity, and honor. Something we don't see much of in Washington, DC.
    • L  •  3 mths ago
      NASA should have listened to him, it would have saved these lives. I remember leaving work, opening the door and seeing this huge mushroom cloud in front of me, and only when I got into the car, the radio station reported of what had just happened. Florida took this extremely hard. No matter where you are in Orlando, Florida, whenever there's a mission, you can see it going up. The night flights are beautiful...all lit up. But, I'll never forget that day of the mushroom cloud, nor the people (and teacher) who died, and the saddest part is that they didn't need to.
    • Give Me Strength  •  Dublin, Ireland  •  3 mths ago
      I admire Mr. Boisjoly so much for speaking up!! Surely he inspired other engineers & woke up their managers, so that other tragedies were prevented. The only Shuttle launch I ever saw was Challenger. I remember the disappointing freezing temps in Florida, and the snotty media reports of 1 or 2 delays before that. The pressure to launch the teacher into space was immense. Such a tragic waste for all!! I had no idea that Mr. Boisjoly had such a hard time afterward.
    • scott  •  Surfside, California  •  3 mths ago
      RIP. Typical government agency don't listen to the engineers listen to management.
    • David  •  3 mths ago
      It is a very difficult decision to risk losing a career by doing the right thing. The courage of this man proves the old adage of no good deed goes unpunished.
    • Loren  •  3 mths ago
      The way the Goverment works if you complain too much you could get fired.
    • John  •  3 mths ago
      Anyone know of an instance when management WAS NOT the problem or a part of the problem?
    • Greg  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      I wrote a research paper on the Challenger Disaster.
      After reading many articles in various sundry periodicals, I found the article in the New Yorker. I was researching this in 1988. The New Yorker article covers it all, from start to finish. The article itself is a comprehensive chronology of what happened.
      What began for me as not a great topic for a College English 101, ten page research paper ended for myself with the understanding that Government Bureaucracy is not the way to go.
      Space Exploration should have been at that time for the singular sake of scientific advancement.
      The secondary application of harvested data knowledge to governmental military programs should not have effected the primary purpose which again should have been purely scientific.
      Bureaucrats make all kinds of decisions for all category of reasons many of which are wrongly motivated.
      Profit based entities tend to make the more integrity based decisions.
      The Richard Branson private based space types of enterprises are the way to go.
      Then, the government can buy the data from him.
      J. F. Kennedy had it all wrong.
      The Manhattan Project was all wrong.
      The Manhattan Project, in its entirety, should go down as, as F.D. Roosevelt used the term in another context: Infamy.
      It was a crime against humanity.
      That is the extreme example of bureaucrats directing science.
      Science should advance for its own sake, which contains the necessary correllary of a general benefit to humankind.
      What should happen in invention is the discovery and the patenting of the intellectual property itself, with the applications coming later.
      This engineer, while being the very least of all the evils still retains that unfortunate term.
      However, that is why the opposite term: heroism, applies here.
      There was not a hero among them.
      A hero would have stood up and shouted what he knew from the tallest tree ie: to any media outlet.
      Might I suggest to any would be hero with any such knowledge now about any matter of gravity such as the topic of my response: The New Yorker.
      Or very simply, might I suggest 911.

      By, Gregory Gordon Downer
    • JohnWilkesBooth  •  3 mths ago
      Integrity in a big money environment is rare indeed . If more people in positions of power would stand up for what's right our country would be so much better off . Sadly most will not and big money gets their way , which ends up being bad for the American public .
      • Rod 3 mths ago
        Having worked in medical devices and pharmaceutical companies, I've lost my job 3 times for upholding ethics & integrity. After a while, it gets old and my quality of life suffers due to unemployment. (Design) Engineering is a thankless job and a hard way to make a living. No wonder people don't choose it as a career. It is the lack of integrity, ethics, and leadership that is the real problem with our economy.
      • Just wondering 3 mths ago
        hey JohnWilkesBooth....unless that is your REAL name, that really is a horrible way to represent yourself. Read a little history on this sociopath, you'll change your profile name quickly.
    • Marc  •  3 mths ago
      As I remember it, Morton Thiokol management felt they were under pressure from NASA to approve the launch, so they basically imposed a "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard on the people who actually knew what was going on (i.e., the engineers) to prove why they shouldn't give a "go". This is simply an impossible standard for an engineer to meet.

      Unfortunately, as I saw in my own job, management NEVER gets the message that when your senior engineers say "no", listen to them.
    • Michael  •  Princeton, New Jersey  •  3 mths ago
      a state trooper at work years ago; he was bragging that he watched a history channel show about challenger and how much he knew, and i said 'morton thiokol', et al, and he was shocked. how do you know so much? i said studied it. actually i watched hours of roger's testimony to congress and remembered it. ahh, im so old now, 43. i used to have a photographic memory of everything that interested me, (only) but now? not so much. maybe i will get a 2nd wind like roger. to me? he is a hero. they said bonaparte could got down the lines and remember hundreds of soldiers names, that always amazed me. i tried to be like him. but our brains are only so strong. glad i am blessed as i am. im waiting for the next mozart or einstein. peace, out, bird
    • TOO OLD  •  3 mths ago
      I don't remember any of those whose decisions resulted in the murder of 7 astronauts being charged with crimes.
      • Mary 3 mths ago
        I watched as the shuttle was destroyed overhead as I stood in the parking lot where I worked. My husband worked at the Cape and after the disaster, the jobs were shut down for a time. We often drove to Daytona Beach to watch the nighttime launches. It was a sight never to be forgotten. The ground shook for hundreds of miles.
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