Families Of Boeing 737 Victims Ask DOJ To Levy $24.8 Billion Fine
HuffPost
"Boeing’s crime is the deadliest corporate crime in U.S. history," read a letter from the victims' families.
Families of the passengers who were killed in two Boeing plane crashes have asked the Department of Justice to fine the aerospace company $24.8 billion and prosecute “responsible corporate officials,” saying that “Boeing’s crime is the deadliest corporate crime in U.S. history.”
The sum represents the maximum that could be levied in a criminal trial. The Justice Department has been mulling criminal charges against the company over its shoddy safety record.
The families made their request Wednesday in a 32-page letter that was sent by attorney Paul Cassell and obtained by HuffPost.
“The families continue to believe the appropriate action now is an aggressive criminal prosecution of The Boeing Company,” the letter read.
All 157 people on board an Ethiopian Airlines flight to Kenya were killed when the pilot lost control of the aircraft in March 2019; less than five months earlier, a Lion Air flight crashed into the sea around Indonesia, killing all 189 people on board. Both of the planes involved were Boeing 737 Max 8s.