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Justice Department reaches deal to allow Boeing to avoid prosecution over 737 Max crashes


The Justice Department has reached a deal with Boeing that will allow the company to avoid criminal prosecution for allegedly misleading U.S. regulators about the 737 Max jetliner before two of the planes crashed and killed 346 people.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department has reached a deal with Boeing that will allow the airplane giant to avoid criminal prosecution for allegedly misleading U.S. regulators about the 737 Max jetliner before two of the planes crashed and killed 346 people, according to court papers filed Friday. Many relatives of the passengers who died in the crashes, which took place off the coast of Indonesia and in Ethiopia less than five months apart in 2018 and 2019, have spent years pushing for a public trial, the prosecution of former company officials, and more severe financial punishment for Boeing. Elizabeth Warren and Richard Blumenthal had urged the Justice Department not to sign a non-prosecution deal with Boeing, saying in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi this week that any agreement that lets the company and its executives “avoid accountability would be a serious mistake.”

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