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Director of UK aircraft parts company pleads guilty for fraudulent trading

Two years after his company was briefly blamed for a worldwide grounding of planes due to safety concerns, the director of an airline parts company in London pleaded guilty on Monday to fraudulent trading.

Jose Alejandro Zamora Yrala admitted to operating AOG Technicals with a fraudulent intent by "falsifying documents relating to origin, provenance and/or status of aircraft parts". This was between January 2019 and Decembre 2023.

He entered his plea in London's Southwark Crown Court after being charged in May, following regulators' safety warnings issued in 2023 to airlines that had purchased or installed parts by AOG.

The Serious Fraud Office of Britain said AOG Technics defrauded its customers, including airlines, maintenance providers, and parts suppliers.

In 2023, jet engine manufacturer CFM International along with its co-owners GE Aerospace & Safran sued Zamora Yrala & AOG Technics at the London High Court. This was shortly after European regulators started investigating reports that parts lacking valid certificates were found in CFM56 engines.

CFM stated in court documents that "there is compelling documentary evidence" that (AOG) sold thousands of jet engines parts to airlines that operate commercial aircraft. (Reporting and editing by Sarah Young; Sam Tobin)

(source: Reuters)