US prosecutors meet Boeing, crash victims as criminal-charges decision looms

US prosecutors meet Boeing, crash victims as criminal-charges decision looms

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US prosecutors meet Boeing, crash victims as criminal-charges decision looms

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - US prosecutors are meeting with Boeing and fatal-crash victims' relatives as a July 7 deadline looms for the Justice Department to decide whether to criminally charge the planemaker, according to two people familiar with the matter and correspondence reviewed by Reuters.

Justice Department officials met with Boeing lawyers on Thursday to discuss the government’s finding that the company violated a 2021 agreement with the department, one of the sources said.

That deal, known as a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA), had shielded it from criminal prosecution over two 737 MAX crashes in 2018 and 2019 that killed 346 people.

Separately, federal prosecutors are slated to meet with victims’ family members on Sunday to update them on the progress of their investigation, according to the second person. U.S. officials are working on a "tight timeline", according to an email sent by the DOJ and reviewed by Reuters.

Boeing’s lawyers from Kirkland & Ellis on Thursday presented their case to officials from the Deputy Attorney General’s office that a prosecution would be unwarranted and that there is no need to tear up the 2021 deal, one of the people said.

Such appeals from companies in the DOJ’s crosshairs are typical when negotiating to resolve a government investigation.