Professor Paul Cassell, a criminal law expert, is quoted in national media (including The New York Times) about a federal judge’s decision to reject a deal that would have allowed Boeing to plead guilty to a conspiracy charge. Boeing would also be fined for misleading regulators about 737 Max planes, two of which later crashed and killed 346 people.
Cassell represents the families of the Max plane crash victims.
Media
- Federal judge rejects Boeing’s guilty plea related to 737 Max crashes
- U.S. judge rejects Boeing’s plea deal in a conspiracy case stemming from fatal plane crashes
- U.S. judge rejects Boeing plea deal in fatal 737 Max crashes
- Boeing plea deal over fatal 737 crashes rejected by judge
- Judge rejects Boeing 737 Max crash plea deal with Justice Department
- Judge rejects Boeing guilty plea over DEI requirement
- Families speak out after judge rejects Boeing’s ‘sweetheart’ plea deal
- Court rejects Boeing plea deal stemming from 737 Max crashes
- Boeing plea in 737 Max fatal crashes rejected by judge
- Boeing plea deal related to Max crashes rejected by judge
- Judge rejects Boeing’s $243 million plea deal over fatal 737 Max crashes
- U.S. judge rejects Boeing’s plea deal in a conspiracy case stemming from fatal plane crashes
- Judge rejects Boeing plea deal in fatal 737 max crashes over diversity provision