Los Angeles Times

BOEING COULD FACE SEC HURDLE

Agency is said to be looking into whether shareholde­rs were properly told about 737 Max problems.

- By Samantha Masunaga

Embattled aerospace giant Boeing Co. is reportedly facing a probe by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission concerning whether the company properly disclosed issues related to its 737 Max airplanes.

Citing people familiar with the matter, Bloomberg reported that officials in the SEC’s enforcemen­t division are investigat­ing whether the Chicago-based plane maker was adequately forthcomin­g with shareholde­rs about “material problems with the plane.”

Investigat­ors are also looking at Boeing’s financial statements to make sure they sufficient­ly reflected the possibilit­y of effects from the 737 Max issues.

The SEC and Boeing declined to comment on the report.

An SEC probe would only be the latest of Boeing’s growing problems related to its 737 Max airplanes after two deadly crashes. The company is facing congressio­nal and federal investigat­ions, as well as a criminal probe. And families of victims who were killed in the crashes have filed lawsuits.

“They haven’t engendered a lot of trust out there,” said John Jacobs, executive director at Georgetown University’s Center for Financial Markets and Policy. “They’re going to be very engaged in fighting this for many years to come.”

Legal experts have said civil lawsuits brought by crash victims’ families will have strong claims for damages. In addition, Boeing could face product liability related to possible plane defects, and negligence allegation­s claiming that the company did not adequately train pilots and did not take steps to fix problems after the first crash.

The first crash occurred in October when a Lion Air flight plunged into the Java Sea off Indonesia shortly after takeoff. Less than six months later, an Ethiopian Airlines flight crashed minutes after takeoff. Together, the two crashes killed 346 people, leaving no survivors.

Investigat­ors have implicated the planes’ flight control software, known as the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System, or MCAS. The software was intended to prevent stalls by pushing down the plane’s nose.

Boeing intends to issue an update to the software, which still needs a sign-off from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. On Friday, acting FAA Administra­tor Daniel Elwell refused to commit to a timetable for a resumption of service.

Boeing has been criticized by U.S. pilot unions about a lack of transparen­cy about the system, and earlier this week, a European pilot group said the company and the FAA were moving too fast to reintroduc­e the planes into the skies.

Since the Ethiopian Airlines crash, 737 Max planes have been grounded worldwide.

Elwell told CNBC that airlines that took the grounded aircraft out of their schedules until August do not need to extend those flight cancellati­ons, a signal that the FAA may clear the plane for f lying again as early as late June.

“It definitely could be a month, two months,” he told CNBC. “It’s all determined by what we find in our analysis of [Boeing’s] applicatio­n, and we’re pretty confident that the applicatio­n is in good shape.”

But earlier this week, he had raised the possibilit­y that it could take up to a year to return the 400 grounded Max aircraft to service.

 ?? Tannen Maury EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? A MAN stands outside a Boeing shareholde­rs meeting in Chicago in April holding photos of people who died when two of the company’s 737 Max planes crashed. Boeing is reportedly facing an investigat­ion by the SEC.
Tannen Maury EPA/Shuttersto­ck A MAN stands outside a Boeing shareholde­rs meeting in Chicago in April holding photos of people who died when two of the company’s 737 Max planes crashed. Boeing is reportedly facing an investigat­ion by the SEC.

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