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DATE=11/19/1999 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=EGYPT AIR INVESTIGATION (L) NUMBER=2-256377 BYLINE=NICK SIMEONE DATELINE=WASHINGTON CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The Chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board is sharply criticizing the American and the Egyptian media for speculating about the cause of the crash of Egypt Air flight 990. Many Egyptians can not believe investigators would suspect one of the flight's seasoned crew members would deliberately take the plane down. Still, Correspondent Nick Simeone reports the FBI is eventually expected to take the lead in looking into whether sabotage was to blame for the deaths of all 217 people on board. TEXT: This investigation has become a delicate diplomatic issue between the United States and Egypt, with Egyptian officials calling suspicions of sabotage a rush to judgement. U-S law enforcement sources have been telling the media that prayer-like remarks heard in Arabic on the cockpit voice recorder could mean a lone relief pilot deliberately plunged the plane into the Atlantic Ocean. Many in Egypt don't want to believe that and with conspiracy theories increasing, National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Jim Hall moved Friday to put an end to what he called a virtual cyclone of speculation. // HALL ACT // Any so-called verbatim information you have heard about that recorder is unauthorized, second, third or fourth-hand and as we have seen in some of the newspapers, headlines with information that is just flat wrong. // END ACT // But he says investigators at this point still believe sabotage might have been the cause of the crash and are moving toward handing the case over to the FBI to lead a criminal probe. Over the past several days, Washington has grown increasingly concerned about Egyptian sensitivities over a case that could lead to lawsuits, damage to the reputation of the country's national airline, and affect tourism - a top source of foreign income. But N-T-S-B Chairman Hall says the course of the investigation will not be guided by the wishes of Egypt if the evidence points to sabotage. // HALL ACT // I would hope that that's a threshold that we could reach together with the Egyptian investigators as we walk through the steps in the investigation that I just outlined. As I have previously explained, the buck stops here. // END ACT // Nearly three weeks after the crash, air safety investigators still have no evidence suggesting the plane was brought down by mechanical failure, fueling suspicion that the cause might be sabotage. (SIGNED) NEB/NJS/PT 19-Nov-1999 17:21 PM EDT (19-Nov-1999 2221 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .