737 MAX plane crashes | Boeing settles with US government to avoid trial

(New York) Boeing has reached an agreement with the U.S. government to avoid an embarrassing trial with an uncertain outcome in the criminal case related to the crashes of two 737 MAX 8 jets in 2018 and 2019, which killed 346 people.



“We have reached an agreement in principle on the terms of a resolution with the Department of Justice” (DOJ), the American aircraft manufacturer said in a statement released overnight from Sunday to Monday.

In a progress report filed Sunday with the Texas federal court, the department confirmed this agreement in principle and committed to transmitting the final agreement to the judge no later than July 19.

The plea agreement comes after the department ruled in mid-May that the group violated an earlier agreement over crashes of planes operated by Indonesia’s Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines.

This so-called deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) of January 7, 2021 required it in particular to improve its compliance and ethics program, with a three-year probationary period.

But the group has been accumulating a series of production and quality problems for many months. The latest episode: the American regulator (FAA) requested on Monday the “immediate” inspection of more than 2,600 aircraft of the 737 family in the United States for a problem with the attachment of the oxygen generators.

An in-flight incident on January 5 on an Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 proved to be the last straw, leading to a host of legal, political, regulatory and governance fallout.


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