Boeing asked to plead guilty over breach of agreement reached after two accidents

Boeing asked to plead guilty over breach of agreement reached after two accidents
Boeing asked to plead guilty over breach of agreement reached after two accidents

The US Department of Justice (DoJ) will offer Boeing a guilty plea for breaching a settlement reached after two crashes that killed 346 people, thereby avoiding a trial, a lawyer for victims’ families said on Sunday, expressing his disagreement.

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“The offer made to Boeing by the DoJ is to plead guilty to an ongoing criminal charge (filed in 2021) for conspiracy to defraud the FAA,” the American air transport regulatory agency, Paul Cassell, a law professor at the University of Utah and a lawyer for families in the criminal part, told AFP.

The announcement was made Sunday afternoon to the victims’ families and their lawyers during a two-hour meeting. The appointment of a supervisor and the imposition of a fine were also discussed, according to a statement from the lawyers.

“Families will vigorously oppose this deal,” Mr Cassell warned.

Contacted by AFP, Boeing declined to comment.

It will ultimately be up to the federal judge in Texas in charge of this case to decide.

“He will have to decide whether to approve a federal regulation that ties his hands at sentencing and prevents him from imposing additional punishment or corrective measures,” the lawyer lamented.

A ministry official “admitted that there was ‘strong interest’ on the part of the families to go to court, but he repeatedly said that the DoJ could not prove the accusations with a reasonable doubt,” said the law firm.

The deal is intended to allow Boeing to avoid a criminal trial that could result in a conviction that could bar it from U.S. government and military contracts, which generated nearly a third of its revenue in 2023.

Boeing entered into a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) with the American authorities on January 7, 2021, including a penalty of $2.5 billion and three years’ probation.

But the Justice Department reported in mid-May that Boeing had failed to meet its obligations, a claim the planemaker disputes.

Boeing is increasing production and quality control problems on three of its four commercial planes currently manufactured since the beginning of 2023.

The in-flight incident on an Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 on January 5, in which a cap door came loose, was too much.

Under the 2021 agreement, the manufacturer admitted to fraud in the certification of its 737 MAX 8 aircraft, which was involved in two fatal accidents that killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019. The aircraft was grounded for 20 months in the United States and around the world.

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