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Families of victims of the 737 MAX crash object to the deal that allows Boeing to avoid prosecution

A lawyer revealed on Saturday that the families of some of those 346 people who died in two deadly Boeing 737 MAX crashes will object to a proposed non-prosecution agreement reached between the planemaker's and the U.S. Justice Department.

In a meeting lasting more than two hours, the Justice Department presented a tentative agreement to families on Friday. A court filing made on Saturday stated that written objections could be filed by Thursday.

Paul Cassell said that the families would not accept any agreement along the lines of the one described by the DOJ yesterday because it does not hold Boeing responsible for the "deadliest corporate crimes in U.S. History." Citing the previous comments made by U.S. district judge Reed O'Connor.

In its filing, the Justice Department stated that it had not yet decided whether or not to accept the settlement agreement. It would make a decision after conferring with families.

The agreement will prevent a trial scheduled for June 23 in which the planemaker is accused of fraud on a charge that it misled U.S. regulatory authorities about a critical flight control system installed on its most popular jet, the 737 MAX.

Boeing would avoid being labeled a felon, and it would be a major blow to the families of those who have lost loved ones in crashes and who had asked prosecutors to bring the U.S. aircraft manufacturer to trial.

Cassell said that the new agreement is a step in the wrong direction compared to last summer when Boeing planned to plead guilty. "Under the current arrangement, they do not plead guilty."

Boeing has declined to comment.

Boeing has agreed to plead guilty in July to a criminal conspiracy charge relating to fraud after two fatal 737 MAX crash in Ethiopia and Indonesia, spanning the years 2018 and 2019. The company will also pay a maximum fine of $487.2million.

Boeing and DOJ officials still haven't exchanged documents to discuss the final details of a non-prosecution agreement.

Lawyers for the families reported that on Friday, Justice Department informed families that Boeing was asked to pay $444.5 millions into a fund for crash victims that would be distributed evenly per victim. This is in addition to $500 million Boeing had paid out in 2021.

Boeing is under increased scrutiny by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) since January 2024 when a MAX 9 that was missing four bolts in a critical area suffered an emergency mid-air and lost a door plug. The FAA limits production to 38 planes a month. Reporting by David Shepardson Editing Rod Nickel

(source: Reuters)