US prosecutors meet with Boeing, crash victims as decision on criminal charges looms, sources say – 06/30/2024 at 02:46

US prosecutors meet with Boeing, crash victims as decision on criminal charges looms, sources say – 06/30/2024 at 02:46
US prosecutors meet with Boeing, crash victims as decision on criminal charges looms, sources say – 06/30/2024 at 02:46

((Automated translation by Reuters, please see disclaimer https://bit.ly/rtrsauto)) by Mike Spector and Chris Prentice

U.S. prosecutors are meeting with Boeing and relatives of fatal crash victims as a July 7 deadline approaches for the Justice Department to decide whether to criminally charge the planemaker, according to two people familiar with the matter and correspondence reviewed by Reuters.

Justice Department officials met with Boeing’s lawyers on Thursday to discuss the government’s conclusion that the company violated a 2021 settlement with the department, one of the people said. That deal, known as a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA), had shielded it from criminal prosecution over two 737 MAX crashes in 2018 and 2019 that killed 346 people.

Separately, federal prosecutors are scheduled to meet with family members of the victims on Sunday to update them on the progress of their investigation, according to the second person. U.S. officials are working on a “tight schedule,” according to an email from the Justice Department reviewed by Reuters.

Boeing lawyers from the firm Kirkland & Ellis presented their arguments to officials in the Assistant Attorney General’s Office on Thursday that lawsuits would not be warranted and that there was no need to tear up the 2021 deal, said one of the people.

Such calls from companies in the Justice Department’s crosshairs are routine during negotiations to resolve a government investigation.

Officials are seeking input from family members to determine how to proceed, according to the email. Prosecutors from the Justice Department’s Criminal Fraud Division and the Dallas District Attorney’s Office will participate in Sunday’s meeting.

Spokespeople for the Justice Department and Boeing declined to comment.

Boeing has previously said it “complied with the terms” of the agreement and formally told prosecutors it disagreed with the finding that it violated the agreement.

U.S. prosecutors recommended top Justice Department officials pursue criminal charges against Boeing after finding the planemaker violated the 2021 deal, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters .

The two sides are discussing a potential resolution of the Justice Department investigation and there is no guarantee that officials will move forward with charges, they said last week.

The proceedings follow the mid-air explosion of a Boeing aircraft panel on Jan. 5, just two days before the company’s DPA expired. The incident highlighted ongoing safety and quality problems at Boeing.

Boeing was set to escape prosecution over a criminal charge of conspiring to defraud the United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) stemming from the 2018-2019 fatal crashes.

Prosecutors had agreed to drop criminal charges on the condition that Boeing review its compliance practices and submit regular reports over a three-year period. Boeing also agreed to pay $2.5 billion to settle the investigation.

In May, officials determined that the company had violated the agreement, exposing Boeing to legal action. The Justice Department said in a complaint filed in Texas that the plane maker failed to “design, implement and enforce a compliance and ethics program designed to prevent and detect violations of U.S. fraud laws throughout its activities”

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