Boeing to plead guilty to fraud in US probe of fatal 737 MAX crashes
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[July 08, 2024] By
Chris Prentice, Mike Spector and David Shepardson
NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Boeing has agreed to plead guilty to a
criminal fraud conspiracy charge and pay a fine of $243.6 million to
resolve a U.S. Justice Department investigation into two 737 MAX fatal
crashes, the government said in a court filing on Sunday.
The plea deal, which requires a judge's approval, would brand the
planemaker a convicted felon in connection with crashes in Indonesia and
Ethiopia over a five-month period in 2018 and 2019 that killed 346
people.
The settlement drew swift criticism from victims' families who wanted
Boeing to face a trial and suffer harsher financial consequences.
The Justice Department's (DOJ) push to charge Boeing has deepened an
ongoing crisis engulfing Boeing since a separate January in-flight
blowout exposed continuing safety and quality issues at the planemaker.
A guilty plea potentially threatens the company's ability to secure
lucrative government contracts with the likes of the U.S. Defense
Department and NASA, although it could seek waivers.
Boeing became exposed to criminal prosecution after the Justice
Department in May found the company violated a 2021 settlement involving
the fatal crashes.
Still, the plea spares Boeing a contentious trial that could have
exposed the company's decisions ahead of the fatal crashes to even
greater public scrutiny. It would also make it easier for the planemaker,
which will have a new CEO later this year, to try to move forward as it
seeks approval for its planned acquisition of Spirit AeroSystems.
A Boeing spokesperson confirmed it had "reached an agreement in
principle on terms of a resolution with the Justice Department."
As part of the deal, the planemaker agreed to spend at least $455
million over the next three years to boost safety and compliance
programs. Boeing's board will have to meet with relatives of those
killed in the MAX crashes, the filing said.
The deal also imposes an independent monitor, who will have to publicly
file annual progress reports, to oversee the firm's compliance. Boeing
will be on probation during the monitor's three-year term.
Lawyers for some of the victims' families said they planned to press
Judge Reed O'Connor, who has been overseeing the case, to reject the
deal.
In a separate document filed to the court, they cited O'Connor's
statement in a February 2023 ruling: "Boeing's crime may properly be
considered the deadliest corporate crime in U.S. history."
The deal is a "slap on the wrist," said Erin Applebaum, a lawyer at
Kreindler & Kreindler LLP representing some of the victims' relatives.
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Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are assembled at the company’s plant in
Renton, Washington, U.S. June 25, 2024. Jennifer Buchanan/Pool via
REUTERS/File Photo
DEEPENING CRISIS AT BOEING
The DOJ on June 30 offered a plea agreement to Boeing and gave the
company until the end of the week to take the deal or face a trial
on a charge of conspiring to defraud the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), which the DOJ in its Sunday court filing said
was "the most serious readily provable offense".
The fraud centered around knowingly false representations Boeing
made to the FAA about new software that saved money by requiring
less intensive training for pilots.
The Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) software
feature was designed to automatically push the airplane’s nose down
in certain conditions. It was tied to the two crashes that led to
the FAA grounding the MAX fleet for 20 months, an action that cost
Boeing $20 billion and was lifted by the government in November
2020.
A panel blew off a new Boeing 737 MAX 9 jet during a Jan. 5 Alaska
Airlines flight, just two days before the 2021 deferred agreement
that had shielded the company from prosecution over the previous
fatal crashes expired. Boeing faces a separate ongoing criminal
probe into the Alaska Airlines incident.
The agreement only covers Boeing's conduct before the fatal crashes
and does not shield the planemaker from any other potential
investigations or charges related to the January incident or other
conduct.
The deal also does not shield any executives, the DOJ filing said,
though charges against individuals are seen as unlikely due to the
statute of limitations. A former Boeing chief technical pilot was
charged in connection with the Boeing fraud agreement but acquitted
by a jury in 2022.
The agreed penalty will be Boeing's second fine of $243.6 million
related to the fatal crashes — bringing the full fine to the maximum
allowed. The company paid the fine previously as part of 2021's $2.5
billion settlement. The $243.6 million fine represented the amount
Boeing saved by not implementing full-flight simulator training for
MAX pilots.
Families of the victims last month pressed the Justice Department to
seek as much as $25 billion.
The DOJ and Boeing are working to document the full written plea
agreement and file it in federal court in Texas by July 19, the DOJ
said in the court filing.
(Reporting by Chris Prentice and Mike Spector in New York and David
Shepardson in Washington; Additional reporting by Allison Lampert in
Montreal; Editing by Joe Brock, Lisa Shumaker and Jamie Freed)
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