Hundreds of people may have died because General Motors and the United States government regulators ignored an ignition switch problem.
General Motors is recalling another 1.3 million cars, this time for experiencing a sudden failure of power steering.
Some of the vehicles are the same ones that have faulty ignition switches - something GM has come under intense scrutiny for.
At least 13 people have already died in crashes linked to the ignition switches. GM now admits it knew of problems with the ignitions but failed to fix them. And there's new details that the government agency in charge of vehicle safety failed to investigate, even after dozens of complaints.
CNN's Drew Griffin has the story of one family who paid a terrible price.
After three weeks of fruitless searching, Malaysian investigators keep getting it wrong.
Time and time again, the public was told one thing - only to be told days later that the information was wrong.
Malaysian government officials said Monday the last words from Flight 370's cockpit were "Good night Malaysian three-seven-zero" - not "All right, good night" as we were told for weeks.
MH370: New last words from cockpit: 'Good night Malaysian three seven zero'
Has the Malaysian government botched the investigation?
CNN's David Mattingly takes a closer at the missteps in the search to Flight 370.
One of the most dedicated members of CNN's team during the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 has been Martin Savidge.
He's spent the better part of a month holed up in a flight simulator in Canada.
Mitchell Casado, reluctant 'pilot of the people'
It hasn't been the easiest assignment.
CNN's Jeanne Moos explains.
More than threr weeks into the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 and still no sign of the missing aircraft.
On Friday, the search area shifted hundreds of miles to the northeast of the previous search zone.
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: New search area, rugged deep-ocean terrain
Objects were pulled from the waters over the weekend, but they weren't debris from the plane.
There have been multiple search zones since the plane disappeared 25 days ago. Are investigators searching in the right place?
Wing commander, Andy Scott has the answer. He is with the New Zealand Defense Forces and has a key operational role in the search for Flight 370.