A Boeing plea deal intended to resolve a case related to two fatal crashes of its planes has been rejected by a US judge.
Boeing had originally agreed with the US government in July to plead guilty to one count of criminal fraud, face independent monitoring, and pay a $243m (£191m) fine.
However, Judge Reed O’Connor struck down the agreement on Thursday, saying it gave the court too little power over the monitoring process.
The decision comes after after years of legal battles stemming from the tragedies, which killed 346 people in total.
In his ruling, O’Connor criticised the deal’s requirements that race be considered when hiring the monitor, which he said would undermine confidence in the pick.
He said he was concerned with the “shifting and contradictory explanations of how the plea agreement’s diversity-and-inclusion provision will… operate”.
He also said the government’s previous years of overseeing the firm had “failed”.
“At this point, the public interest requires the Court to step in,” he wrote.
He noted that the proposed agreement gave Boeing a say in selecting a candidate and did not force the company to comply with the monitor’s recommendations.
Judge O’Connor also referenced objections brought by some families of those killed on the flights, who had criticised it as a “sweetheart” arrangement that did not properly hold the firm to account for the deaths.
The Department of Justice said it was reviewing the decision. Boeing did not immediately comment.
The two sides have 30 days to develop a new plan.
An ongoing crisis
The ruling raises new uncertainty for Boeing, which has been struggling to emerge from the shadow cast by two, near-identical crashes of its 737 Max planes in 2018 and 2019.
The aerospace giant was plunged back into crisis in January when a door panel on a new Boeing plane operated by Alaska Airlines blew off soon after take-off.
The incident reignited questions about what Boeing had done to improve its safety and quality record since the accidents, which were tied to the company’s flight control system.
The door panel malfunction happened shortly before the end of a three-year period of increased monitoring and reporting.
Boeing had agreed to the monitoring as part of a 2021 plea deal to resolve a charge it had deceived regulators over the flight control system.
In May, the Department of Justice said Boeing had violated the terms of that agreement, opening up the possibility of prosecution.
Instead, the two sides struck another deal, angering families who had hoped to see the company brought to trial.
Erin Appelbaum, partner at Kreindler & Kreindler, which represents some families of those killed on the 2019 Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, called Thursday’s ruling an “excellent decision and a significant victory” for the victims’ families.
“We anticipate a significant renegotiation of the plea deal that incorporates terms truly commensurate with the gravity of Boeing’s crimes,” she said.
“It’s time for the [Department of Justice] to end its lenient treatment of Boeing and demand real accountability.”
In the ruling, Judge O’Connor wrote it was “not clear what all” Boeing had done to breach the 2021 agreement.
Nonetheless, he wrote, “taken as true that Boeing breached the [deal], it is fair to say that the government’s attempt to ensure compliance has failed”.
Judge O’Connor also criticised the deal’s diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) requirements.
“In a case of this magnitude, it is in the utmost interest of justice that the public is confident this monitor selection is done based solely on competency,” he wrote.
“The parties’ DEI efforts only serve to undermine this confidence in the government and Boeing’s ethics and anti-fraud efforts.”