Lawyers for relatives of people killed in Boeing Max crashes have asked a US judge to reject a plea agreement that the aircraft maker struck with prosecutors, saying it is too lenient and lets the company avoid accountability for causing 346 deaths.
Some of the lawyers argued that the Justice Department is treating Boeing lightly because the firm is a major contractor to the US government.
Boeing agreed in July to plead guilty to a single count of fraud to settle allegations that it deceived regulators who approved the 737 Max and then broke a 2021 settlement that would have let the company escape criminal prosecution.
Under this month’s deal, Boeing would pay a fine of at least 243.6 million dollars (£189m), invest 455 million dollars (£354m) in compliance and safety programmes, and be placed on probation for three years.
The Justice Department and Boeing would pick a monitor to oversee the company’s compliance.
District Judge Reed O’Connor in Fort Worth, Texas, can accept the agreement and the proposed sentence, or reject the deal, which likely would lead to new negotiations between Boeing and prosecutors.
Relatives of many of the victims want Boeing to be put on trial.