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Director of UK aircraft parts company jailed after fraud led to planes being grounded

The director of an airline parts company in London who sold tens of thousands of engine parts using forged documents, causing planes to be briefly grounded due to safety concerns, has been?incarcerated?for four and eight months. Jose Alejandro Zamora Yrala (38), pleaded guilty to fraudulent trading in December, admitting to defrauding AOG Technics customers and potential clients by falsifying documents regarding the source and condition engine parts between January 2019 and December 2023.

The documents contained many parts for CFM56 engine parts that are used in some Airbus and Boeing aircraft. The discovery of the documents in 2023 caused planes to be briefly grounded around the world and led to calls for additional regulation.

Zamora Yarala was in court on Monday at London's Southwark Crown Court, where prosecutor Faras baloch claimed that his crimes led to more than 60,000 suspect components entering the global supply chain for aviation.

UNDERMINED THE REGULATORY FRAMEWORK

The judge Simon Picken said that his actions "more or less completely undermined a regulatory framework intended to protect the millions of people flying every day".

Zamora Yrala’s lawyer Nicola Howard allegedly told the court that he "cut corners to make trading easier" and didn't see the ramifications of his actions at the time.

He will also be subject to confiscation proceedings for compensating the affected companies.

Companies suffered losses of millions of dollars

AOG Technics, according to Baloch, sold parts with false documents worth a total of 6.9 million pounds (9.3 million dollars), which represents 90% of its revenue.

Baloch stated that the fraud cost American Airlines, which had obtained parts from AOG Technics, about 23 million pounds. This included the costs of leasing replacements, repairing damaged engines and aircraft out of service.

American Airlines didn't immediately respond to our request for a comment.

Baloch said that GE Aerospace, the co-owner of CFM International and?Safran, suffered financial losses in the range of 3 million pounds each and 580,000 pounds. They also suffered "reputational damage".

GE Aerospace - and Safran did NOT immediately respond to a comment request.

The 2023 discovery prompted a worldwide hunt

CFM -International, GE, and Safran sued Zamora Yrala, and AOG Technologies in London's High Court, 2023. This was shortly after European regulators started investigating reports that parts with?invalid certificates were found inside CFM56 engine.

Baloch stated that the CFM56 was "the leading commercial engine and powers Boeing 737s and Airbus A320 planes".

CFM had launched a global hunt for parts from AOG Technics with?suspected fake documentation.

Baloch claimed that Zamora's?fraud caused "a loss in trust" for the airline industry.

Emma Luxton, Director of Operations at the Serious Fraud Office, said in a press release that Zamora Yrala’s fraud “raised public safety in a manner that is beyond belief”.

(source: Reuters)