Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Top Boeing lawyer to retire, becomes latest exec to leave the company

WATCH: (From Dec. 24, 2019) Canadian who lost family in Ethiopia crash: Boeing execs belong in jail – Dec 24, 2019

A close adviser to Boeing’s ousted CEO will also leave the company.

Story continues below advertisement

Mike Luttig was Boeing’s general counsel from 2006 until this spring.

Shortly after the crash of a second Boeing 737 MAX, the company’s premier aircraft, he was assigned to head the company’s legal strategy and to advise the board.

Luttig, who will retire next week, is the latest executive to leave the beleaguered company. In addition to CEO Dennis Muilenburg who was pushed out this week, Kevin McAllister, the head of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, was forced out in October.

Anne Toulouse, senior vice-president of communications, will leave at the end of the year.

Luttig served 15 years on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit before joining Boeing.

Story continues below advertisement

“We are deeply indebted to Judge Luttig for his extraordinary service to Boeing over these nearly 14 years, especially through this past, challenging year for our company,” said interim CEO Greg Smith in a prepared statement.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

In October 2018, a brand-new MAX operated by Indonesia’s Lion Air crashed into the sea near Jakarta. Five months later, in March, an Ethiopian Airlines MAX went down shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa.

Story continues below advertisement

All 346 people aboard the two planes were killed.

A faulty sensor caused an anti-stall system to activate before the two disasters, pushing down the nose of both planes. Boeing had not told pilots about the MCAS system until after the Lion Air crash, and regulators at the FAA didn’t know much about it either.

Earlier this month, the House Transportation Committee disclosed an internal FAA analysis made after the first crash, which estimated that there would be 15 more fatal crashes over 45 years until Boeing fixed MCAS.

Yet the FAA did not ground the plane until the second crash.

— With files by Reuters

Advertisement
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article