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DOJ Considers Deal Allowing Boeing to Avoid Prosecution for 737 MAX Crashes

The tentative agreement would avoid a June trial, with Boeing paying $444.5 million more to victims' families, but families plan to formally object.

Overview

  • The U.S. Department of Justice is weighing a nonprosecution agreement with Boeing over fraud charges tied to the 737 MAX crashes, which killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019.
  • Under the proposed deal, Boeing would avoid a guilty plea and trial, instead paying an additional $444.5 million into a victims' fund, on top of the $500 million paid in 2021.
  • Families of crash victims have expressed outrage, calling the proposal insufficient for accountability and vowing to file formal objections with the court.
  • The agreement would prevent Boeing from being labeled a felon, a designation that could jeopardize its eligibility for government contracts and defense work.
  • No final decision has been made, and the DOJ has stated it will consider the families' objections before determining whether to proceed with the agreement or go to trial.