US to criminally charge Boeing, seek guilty plea, sources say
Send a link to a friend
[July 01, 2024] By
Mike Spector and Chris Prentice
(Reuters) -The U.S. Justice Department will criminally charge Boeing
with fraud over two fatal crashes and ask the planemaker to plead guilty
or face a trial, two people familiar with the matter said on Sunday.
The Justice Department planned to formally offer a plea agreement to
Boeing later in the day, which includes a financial penalty and
imposition of an independent monitor to audit the company's safety and
compliance practices for three years, the sources said.
Justice Department officials plan to give Boeing until the end of the
week to respond to the offer, which they will present as nonnegotiable,
the sources said. Should Boeing refuse to plead guilty, prosecutors plan
to take the company to trial, they said.
Boeing and the Justice Department declined to comment. Reuters was first
to report the Justice Department's decision to prosecute Boeing and seek
a guilty plea.
The Justice Department decided to charge Boeing after finding it
violated a 2021 agreement that had shielded it from prosecution over the
fatal crashes involving 737 MAX jets. The deadly crashes took place in
2018 and 2019, killing 346 people.
The decision to move toward criminally charging Boeing deepens an
ongoing crisis engulfing the planemaker, exposing the company to
additional financial ramifications and tougher government oversight.
A guilty plea could also carry implications for Boeing's ability to
enter into government contracts such as those with the U.S. military
that make up a significant portion of its revenue. Companies with felony
convictions can receive waivers, and it remained unclear to what extent
the Justice Department's proposed plea deal addresses the issue.
Justice Department officials revealed their decision to victims' family
members during a call earlier on Sunday. The proposal would require
Boeing to plead guilty to conspiring to defraud the U.S. Federal
Aviation Administration in connection with the fatal crashes, the
sources said.
The Justice Department's push for Boeing to plead guilty follows a
separate January in-flight blowout that exposed continuing safety and
quality issues at the planemaker.
A panel blew off a new Boeing 737 MAX 9 jet during a Jan. 5 Alaska
Airlines flight, just two days before a 2021 deferred prosecution
agreement with the Justice Department expired.
That agreement had shielded Boeing from prosecution over the 2018 and
2019 fatal crashes. Boeing has previously said it "honored the terms” of
the settlement and formally told prosecutors it disagrees with the
finding that it violated the agreement.
The proposed agreement also includes a $487.2 million financial penalty,
only half of which Boeing would be required to pay, they added. That is
because prosecutors are giving the company credit for a payment it made
as part of the previous settlement related to the fatal crashes of the
Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines flights. The penalty is the maximum
legally allowed for the charge.
[to top of second column] |
Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun, Washington, D.C., June 18, 2024.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Boeing could also likely be forced to pay restitution under the
proposal's terms, the amount of which will be at a judge's
discretion, the sources said. The offer also contemplates subjecting
Boeing to three years of probation, they said.
The plea deal would also require Boeing's board to meet with
victims' relatives, they said.
Victims' relatives expressed anger toward Justice Department
officials during the call, viewing the proposed plea deal as failing
to hold Boeing accountable for the fatal crashes, said Erin
Applebaum, one of the lawyers representing victims’ relatives.
Family members wanted the company to face additional charges and
stiffer financial consequences, she said.
“The 737 MAX families vigorously oppose the shameful new sweetheart
deal between Boeing and the Department of Justice,” said Applebaum.
She called the proposed plea agreement’s financial penalty
“negligible” and said victims’ families will oppose the deal in
court.
The Justice Department declined to comment on the families'
reaction.
It is unusual for the Justice Department to inform other interested
parties of its plans before notifying the company in its crosshairs,
a third source said. But the Justice Department, led by Attorney
General Merrick Garland, has sought to change its tack after facing
backlash from the victims' families over the original 2021
agreement. Victims' relatives found out about the 2021 deal only
after it had been negotiated.
U.S. lawmakers in June grilled Chief Executive Dave Calhoun over
Boeing's tarnished safety record. Lawyers for victims' family
members have cited criticism from Capitol Hill when pressing the
Justice Department to prosecute the planemaker and impose a fine of
up to $24.78 billion.
Boeing previously paid $2.5 billion as part of the deal with
prosecutors that granted the company immunity from criminal
prosecution over a fraud conspiracy charge related to the 737 MAX's
flawed design.
Boeing had to abide by the terms of the deferred prosecution
agreement for a three-year period that ended on Jan. 7. Prosecutors
would then have been poised to ask a judge to dismiss the fraud
conspiracy charge. But in May, the Justice Department found Boeing
breached the agreement, exposing the company to prosecution.
(Reporting by Mike Spector and Chris Prentice; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |