After two Boeing 737 Max crashes, families are still seeking answers from DOJ


Enlarge this image

Catherine Berthet of France, whose daughter Camille was killed in the 2019 crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, speaks Wednesday alongside other family members of victims after meeting with Justice Department officials.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

hide caption

toggle caption

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Catherine Berthet of France, whose daughter Camille was killed in the 2019 crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, speaks Wednesday alongside other family members of victims after meeting with Justice Department officials.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

WASHINGTON — More than five years after the crashes of two 737 Max jets killed 346 people, families who lost loved ones are still pushing the U.S. Justice Department to hold Boeing accountable.

Family members and their lawyers met with federal prosecutors for five hours on Wednesday.

They emerged frustrated and disappointed.

“I’m left with the question of what was the point? What did I come here for?,” said Zipporah Kuria, who flew in from London for the meeting. Her father Joseph Kuria was on his way to Kenya, where he was born, to do philanthropic work when he was killed in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 in March 2019.

As the DOJ investigates Boeing, crash victims' families wonder why it's taken so long

Business

As the DOJ investigates Boeing, crash victims’ families wonder why it’s taken so long

Boeing has paid out billions of dollars in settlements from a pair of crashes in 2018 and 2019 that were caused by faulty flight control software. But the company and its leaders have largely avoided criminal prosecution after reaching an agreement with the Justice Department that essentially put the company on probation.

Read More:   Trump's wild year: Criminal charges set him up for the big house — or the White House

The victims’ families are still furious about that deal, which they see as a betrayal.

“You sort of wonder whether they’re in bed with Boeing,” said Paul Njoroge, who lost his wife and three children in the second crash.

After a long day of meetings at the Justice Department, the family members gathered on the sidewalk outside, holding up pictures of parents, children, husbands and wives who were killed.


Enlarge this image

Catherine Berthet (left), Zipporah Kuria (center) and Naoise Connolly Ryan (right) hold photos of relatives who were killed in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 in 2019.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

hide caption

toggle caption

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Catherine Berthet (left), Zipporah Kuria (center) and Naoise Connolly Ryan (right) hold photos of relatives who were killed in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 in 2019.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

The families hoped prosecutors would take their concerns about Boeing more seriously after a door plug panel blew out of a 737 Max jet in midair over Portland, Ore. in January. The Justice Department has opened an investigation of that incident, informing passengers on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 that they are “a possible victim of a crime.”

“We did come here quite hopeful thinking, oh my gosh, we’re now on the same page, this is dangerous. But it was quickly apparent that, you know, the tenor had not changed,” Kuria said. “So it was quite disappointing.”

The families have now met several times with lawyers for the Justice Department. But they’ve gotten very few answers to their questions.

Read More:   Nintendo is expected to launch the ‘Switch 2’ console this year. Here’s what to expect

“They say they hear us, but I don’t feel heard,” said Yalena Lopez-Lewis, whose husband was killed on the Ethiopian flight. “To be met with so many ‘I don’t knows,’ ‘I haven’t read this report,’ ‘I’m unaware,’ is unacceptable.”

FBI letter tells Alaska Airlines passengers they are 'a possible victim of a crime'

National

FBI letter tells Alaska Airlines passengers they are ‘a possible victim of a crime’

The DOJ says the families of those killed in 2 Boeing crashes are not crime victims

Law

The DOJ says the families of those killed in 2 Boeing crashes are not crime victims

“We certainly hope they do the right thing and continue to pursue this case, continue to pursue it through a jury trial so the public can understand what happened when 346 people were killed,” said Paul Cassell, a professor at the University of Utah College of Law and a former federal judge who is representing the families of the Max crash victims for free.

The Justice Department could extend the probation deal for another year, or drop the criminal case against Boeing altogether. That decision is likely to come within the next two months, Cassell said.

“We are hoping the Department of Justice will do the right thing now,” said Naoise Connolly Ryan of Ireland, who lost her husband Mick in the Ethiopian crash.

“We don’t want a third crash,” Ryan said. “We don’t want anyone waking up to our situation.”

Leave a Reply