Hartford Courant

Boeing crash victims’ kin say they weren’t consulted

15 families accused Justice Department of denying them chance to be heard

- By Niraj Chokshi

More than a dozen families of people killed in two Boeing 737 Max crashes are accusing the Justice Department of illegally leaving them in the dark when it reached a settlement with the company this year.

In a court filing this week, 15 families accused the department of denying them an opportunit­y to weigh in on a criminal investigat­ion into Boeing under a 2004 law meant to protect victims of crime and their representa­tives. They are asking a federal judge to force the department to turn over documents related to that investigat­ion and to revoke the company’s protection from further criminal prosecutio­n on the matter.

“What happened here in the waning days of the previous administra­tion was a complete short circuit of the congressio­nally mandated process for the victims to be conferred with and have an opportunit­y to influence the outcome,” said Paul Cassell, a former federal judge who is representi­ng the families.

The 15 families that brought the motion were joined by dozens more who signed on in support of it, representi­ng a significan­t share of the 346 people killed in two Max crashes, in Indonesia in 2018 and in Ethiopia in 2019. The episodes led to a global grounding of the plane for nearly two years, a debacle that cost Boeing billions of dollars and prompted investigat­ions around the world.

Under the Justice Department’s settlement, which was announced in the final weeks of the Trump administra­tion, Boeing agreed to pay $2.5 billion, most of it to the airlines that suffered financial losses. Another $500 million went to a fund for the families or representa­tives of the victims and about $250 million was paid as a criminal penalty to the federal government.

Neither the Justice Department nor Boeing immediatel­y responded to requests for comment.

Even at the time the deal was announced, many criticized it as inadequate. Rep. Peter Defazio, D-ore., chair of the House Transporta­tion Committee, said it was a “slap on the wrist and is an insult to the 346 victims who died as a result of corporate greed.”

News of the Jan. 7 agreement surprised many of the relatives of those who died, including Naoise Connolly Ryan, whose husband, Mick, died in the crash in Ethiopia in 2019, leaving behind a daughter, who is now 6, and a son, who is now 3. Connolly Ryan said she and many others learned of the settlement from the news.

“We had absolutely no idea. It’s one of those moments in time that is burned in my memory,” she said. “It’s blood money. So I refuse to accept it. This did not reflect in any way a sense of justice, criminal justice, and what should have been accountabi­lity at the highest levels inside Boeing.”

The families said the Justice Department also misled them by falsely telling them that there was no criminal investigat­ion into Boeing. Under the 2004 Crime Victims’ Rights Act, the government is required to allow victims of crime or their representa­tives to confer on criminal cases and to act in “fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy.”

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