Investigators are saying that a Boeing airplane that was the subject of a terrifying viral video suffered an engine failure that led to a fuel leak.

The video was from an international flight more than one year ago that led to the passengers on the plane freaking out and crying, likely believing they were all going to die like the few hundred who perished on Boeing planes in recent years.

As previously reported by The Dallas Express, Boeing and federal prosecutors arrived at a plea deal regarding accusations of criminal fraud at the company.

Multiple other incidents in recent months involving Boeing aircraft have further stoked concerns about its planes’ safety, as reported by DX. Whistleblowers have stepped forward to accuse the company of faulty quality control measures and falsifying records.

Critics of the air travel industry have raised concerns about its obsession with “diversity, equity, and inclusion” initiatives over core business and safety practices, as reported previously by DX. This shift in focus has sparked debates about whether such initiatives could potentially be contributing factors that compromise passenger safety at companies like Boeing, Southwest, and American Airlines.

Here’s some of what the New York Post published about the latest PR disaster for Boeing:

A New York-bound Boeing flight that went viral when flames were filmed shooting out of its wings had suffered “engine failure leading to a fuel leak,” according to an official investigation published Friday.

Delta Flight DAL209 went wildly viral in February last year when a passenger filmed the terrifying sparks and flames after a loud bang — with some of the 211 passengers onboard heard bursting into tears.

A UK government investigation found that “during takeoff from Edinburgh Airport bound for New York, a high-pressure turbine blade fractured in the right engine.”

“The blade damaged a further five blades,” throwing it out of balance and fracturing a tube in the wing, according to the report released Friday by the government’s Air Accidents Investigation Branch.