National Post

Lawsuit blasts Boeing board

737 MAX SAFETY

- JEF feeley

Boeing Co. directors, including current chief executive David Calhoun, lied about the company’s oversight of its 737 MAX 8 airliner and participat­ed in a misleading public relations campaign following two fatal crashes involving the plane, shareholde­rs claim.

The board ignored red flags about the 737 MAX, didn’t develop its own tools to evaluate safety and didn’t properly hold former chief executive Dennis Muilenburg accountabl­e for launching a lobbying and public-relations effort to push back against criticism of the plane’s design flaws, according to recently unsealed court filings.

“Prior to the grounding of the 737 MAX, the board failed to undertake its own evaluation of the safety of keeping the 737 MAX aloft,” investors said in an amended Delaware Chancery Court complaint that was made public Feb. 5. The board then “compounded its lack of oversight by publicly lying about it.”

The unsealed filings are part of a derivative suit first filed in 2019 by Boeing shareholde­rs after Lion Air and Ethiopian Air 737 MAX crashes claimed a total of 346 lives. Unlike in shareholde­r class actions, judgments or settlement­s in derivative suits are usually paid back to the company from liability insurance policies for its directors and officers.

The amended complaint makes public for the first time details about Boeing’s internal handling of the 737 MAX debacle, which led to a two-year grounding of the planes. Delaware Chancery Court Judge Morgan Zurn agreed to make the suit’s details public after concluding the “public interest” in the board’s handling of the 737 MAX fiasco “favours disclosure.”

“It should come as no surprise that a filing by plaintiffs seeking to gain advantage in a lawsuit presents a misleading and incomplete picture of the activities of Boeing and its board of directors,” Bradley Akubuiro, a Boeing spokesman, said in an emailed statement. “We believe the plaintiffs’ claims lack merit, and will renew our motion to dismiss the lawsuit later this year.”

In an unsealed company filing, Boeing directors argued they had “robust and well-establishe­d mechanisms” in place for evaluating the 737 MAX’S safety profile before it ever left the ground and “these systems operated to ensure the board’s engagement on matters related to the safety and quality of Boeing’s products.”

Problems with the plane’s automated flight-control system — which goes by the acronym MCAS — have been implicated in the crashes. The U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion last year gave Boeing the green light to have the planes resume passenger flights after extensive modificati­ons to the MCAS systems. The 737 MAX is set to return to European skies this month after being cleared by regulators there as well.

But Boeing executives originally pointed to possible pilot and maintenanc­e errors as playing a major role in the October 2018 crash of Lion Air Flight 610 in Indonesia while they secretly began to address MCAS’S flaws.

Two weeks after the Lion Air crash, Muilenburg launched a “public relations, investor relations and lobbying campaign” designed to counter U.S. airline-pilot unions’ condemnati­ons of Boeing’s disclosure­s about the 737 MAX’S design and a wave of negative press. The campaign made no mention of Boeing engineers’ focus on MCAS but instead sought to divert attention to other possible reasons for the crashes, according to the amended suit.

 ??  ?? Dennis Muilenburg
Dennis Muilenburg

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