The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has scheduled a meeting with the families of victims from the two fatal Boeing 737 Max crashes. This meeting is part of the DOJ's review to determine if Boeing violated the terms of a deferred prosecution agreement. The outcome could potentially lead to new criminal charges against Boeing if it is found that the agreement was breached.
Boeing faces new threat of criminal prosecution as DOJ meets with families of 737 MAX victims to determine if immunity deal was breached https://t.co/ZThUCMOJVa https://t.co/Tej7k0EBmk
DOJ to meet with families of Boeing victims as decision closes on if company violated prosecution deal https://t.co/wrpNZSP5wb
US DOJ schedules meeting with Boeing victims https://t.co/4snnJEImD6 https://t.co/DHq6CyDLH7
The Justice Department invited the families of victims of two fatal Boeing 737 Max crashes to a meeting as it nears a decision over whether the company breached a deferred prosecution agreement, according to a letter obtained by ABC News. https://t.co/uk7Ofo2LKL
New from me @gregfarrel on @TheTerminal now: DOJ Fraud Section Chief Glenn Leon has asked lawyers for the families of 737 Max crash victims to meet in one of the last three days of May so that it can relay its decision on whether Boeing violated its deferred prosecution agreement