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US authorities says no decision yet on whether to prosecute Boeing

The U.S. Justice Department has actually made no choice yet on whether to pursue a prosecution of planemaker Boeing for breaking the regards to a 2021 settlement related to 2 deadly 737 MAX crashes in 2018 and 2019, a leading DOJ official said in an email seen .

Glenn Leon, chief of the Justice Department's scams area, said in an email on Friday to attorneys representing family members of victims of the crashes: The department has not decided on how to continue or whether to pursue prosecution of Boeing.

The Justice Department and Boeing both declined remark.

In May, the Justice Department stated

Boeing had broken a 2021 arrangement

with prosecutors that protected it from criminal prosecution over the deadly crashes. The 2021 DPA needed the U.S. planemaker to overhaul its compliance practices. Boeing has stated it abided by the agreement.

Earlier on Friday, the New York City Times, pointing out confidential sources, reported that the Justice Department is anticipated to permit Boeing to escape criminal prosecution for breaking the DPA.

Leon's e-mail said, The reporting was simply not right.

The Times later revised its story to state that the Justice Department is thinking about allowing Boeing to avoid criminal prosecution.

A New york city Times spokesperson, in an emailed declaration sent after the story was modified, stated: We are positive in the precision of our reporting.

The Justice Department said in May it identified that Boeing had broken a 2021 deferred prosecution contract that shielded the business from a criminal charge of conspiracy to devote fraud developing from the 2 fatal crashes in 2018 and 2019, which killed 346 people.

Boeing in January 2021 reached an arrangement with the DOJ to pay $2.5 billion to solve a criminal examination into the company's conduct surrounding the fatal crashes.

Boeing last week told the government it did not breach the arrangement. Federal district attorneys have till July 7 to notify a. federal judge in Texas of their plans, which could be to continue. with a criminal case or work out a plea deal with Boeing. The. Justice Department could likewise extend the delayed prosecution. arrangement for a year.

Boeing previously paid $2.5 billion as part of that deal, in. which district attorneys concurred not to prosecute the company over a. scams conspiracy charge connected to the 737 MAX's flawed design.

Justice Department officials found that Boeing broke. the DPA after a panel blew off a new Alaska Airlines. Boeing 737 MAX 9 jet on Jan. 5 this year, simply 2 days in the past. the 2021 agreement expired. The incident exposed continued. safety and quality issues at Boeing.

Family members of the victims of the two fatal 737 MAX crashes. have actually long criticized Boeing's deal with district attorneys, contending. that Justice Department officials stopped working to hold the business. accountable. This week, they pushed prosecutors to seek a fine. against the planemaker of nearly $25 billion and move forward. with a prosecution.

(source: Reuters)