San Diego Union-Tribune

BOEING’S LEGAL ADVISER TO RETIRE

Luttig aided CEO Muilenburg, who is also departing, in matters related to 737 Max crisis

- BY BRENDAN CASE

Boeing said another high-ranking executive working on the company’s response to the 737 Max crisis will step down.

Michael Luttig, 65, will retire at year’s end, Boeing said in a statement Thursday, three days after the planemaker announced the departure of Dennis Muilenburg as chief executive officer. Luttig, the company’s former general counsel, was reassigned in May to advise Muilenburg and the board of directors on legal matters related to two deadly Max crashes.

Luttig’s departure adds to the management turmoil at Boeing as the ninemonth grounding of the manufactur­er’s best-selling jet drags on. David Calhoun, a board member who took over as chairman in October, will replace Muilenburg on Jan. 13. Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith is serving as interim CEO.

Boeing is under increased pressure in Washington after disclosing a new batch of internal communicat­ions about the Max’s developmen­t to the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion on Dec. 23. That was the same day Muilenburg stepped down.

The messages between Boeing employees paint a “very disturbing picture,” according to an aide to a House of Representa­tives committee. At least some of the messages were written by the same Boeing pilot whose 2016 communicat­ions became the subject of sharp questionin­g by lawmakers in October, Bloomberg News reported earlier this week.

The documents haven’t been released publicly. The staff of the Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Committee are still reviewing the messages and didn’t provide detailed descriptio­ns of what they contain.

“Similar to other records previously disclosed by Boeing, the records appear to point to a very disturbing picture of both concerns expressed by Boeing employees about the company’s commitment to safety and efforts by some employees to ensure Boeing’s production plans were not diverted by regulators or others,” a committee aide said in a statement.

Boeing said earlier this week that “the tone and content of some of these communicat­ions does not reflect the company we are and need to be.”

Luttig had served as a judge in federal appeals court before joining Chicago-based Boeing in 2006. Executives at the company have typically retired at 65.

Case writes for Bloomberg News.

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Michael Luttig

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