(Bloomberg) -- The US Justice Department is scrutinizing the midair blowout last month of a Boeing Co. door plug on an Alaska Air flight, in a move that could expose the company to criminal ...
The Justice Department submitted an agreement with Boeing on Wednesday in which the aerospace giant will plead guilty to a fraud charge for misleading U.S. regulators who approved the 737 Max ...
The families would like to confer about the Department’s plans and particularly to urge the Department to reveal to the judge ...
Boeing’s 737 Max ... safety of the flying public,” US Attorney Erin Nealy Cox said in a statement. “This case sends a clear message: The Department of Justice will hold manufacturers like ...
That was the same amount it paid under the 2021 settlement that the Justice Department said the company breached. An independent monitor would be named to oversee Boeing’s safety and quality ...
The most serious set-back of this breach is that it has pitted the NTSB against Boeing in the U.S. Department of Justice review of the plane manufacturer’s Deferred Prosecution Agreement ...
The company is also under pressure from the Department of Justice which is determining whether Boeing violated the terms of its 2021 settlement on Boeing 737 MAX fraud charges by failing to ...
As announced ahead of time, Boeing delivered another quarter full ... rejected a plea deal reached between Boeing and the US Department of Justice. This sent them back to the bargaining table.
The department’s No. 2 official, Emil Bove, escalated his conflict with the interim leaders of the F.B.I., accusing them of ...
The Department of Justice today [Monday] completed the execution of a final order of forfeiture of a U.S.-made Boeing 747 cargo ... Organization (FTO),“ US authorities said in a statement.