Didn't hear much about it with the 737 Max taking up all the aviation headlines. But the NTSB has released their interim report on the Atlas/Amazon 767 crash in Texas back in the spring.
Report:
https://dms.ntsb.gov/pubdms/search/hitlist.cfm?docketID=63168&CFID=3041421&CFTOKEN=9eb7f19d5413e33d-334C8CF1-0FB6-0B0B-EFEC7294646BA690CVR transcript:
https://dms.ntsb.gov/public/63000-63499/63168/631200.pdfShort version: In an expedited descent to 3K, with speedbrake on and flaps 1 notch, somebody (likely F.O. who was flying at the time, and probably had a hand on the speedbrake/spoiler lever) inadvertently hit the TOGA switch (which is armed with 1 notch flaps). Airplane initiates go around power, with no visual reference in IMC the F.O. mistakes the sudden acceleration for a stall and pushes the nose down hard enough to split the yokes/elevators overpowering the autopilot. Plane comes out of the clouds at 3,500ft with the engines at go around power and the F.O. pushing the nose down. By the time the captain realizes what's going on it's to late to recover. When they impacted the ground the autopilot and autothrottles were still engaged, it seems that they never noticed the TOGA switch was engaged, and never hit the autopilot and autothrottle disconnects.
Crew background reports on the F.O. are scary, multiple failed check rides, bounced around from one carrier to another. The CVR transcript is also sketchy even before the accident sequence, lots of confusion and nervous chatter on routing and approach fixes and programing the FMS.
Anyway, figured some here might be interested.