| The 
				Transportation Department's inquiry was launched in the wake of 
				October's Lion Air accident that killed 189 people and is being 
				conducted by its inspector general, which has warned two FAA 
				offices to safeguard computer files, the Journal said.
 Boeing did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The 
				Federal Aviation Administration declined to comment. Two 
				government officials briefed on the matter said it would not be 
				surprising for the Transportation Department’s inspector general 
				to investigate a major safety issue but could not immediately 
				confirm the report.
 
 The inquiry focuses on the anti-stall system, the Journal 
				reported, citing a government official briefed on its status.
 
 Aviation authorities are looking into whether the system may 
				have played a role in the Lion Air accident as well as the March 
				10 crash of an Ethiopian Airlines flight that killed all 157 
				people on board, the newspaper added.
 
 The Transportation Department is seeking to determine whether 
				the FAA used appropriate design standards and engineering 
				analyses in certifying the aircraft's anti-stall system, known 
				as MCAS, according to the report.
 
 (Reporting by Ismail Shakil in Bengaluru, Eric Johnson and David 
				Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
 
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