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Lawyer for Boeing test pilot says he is being made a 'scapegoat' for deady 737 MAX crashes as he pleads not guilty to fraud charges for 'deceiving safety regulators' about flight-control system

  The lawyer for Boeing's former top pilot has said his client is being made a 'scapegoat' for the failings of the 737MAX jet af...

 The lawyer for Boeing's former top pilot has said his client is being made a 'scapegoat' for the failings of the 737MAX jet after he was criminally indicted on Thursday on charges of deceiving safety regulators who were evaluating the plane, which was later involved in two deadly crashes. 

Mark A. Forkner, 49, was Boeing's former top pilot who was involved in testing the 737 Max jetliner and was accused of giving the FAA incomplete information with lead to the deaths of hundreds.  

His lawyer David Gerger said Forkner is being made a 'scapegoat'.

'This tragedy deserves a search for the truth – not a search for a scapegoat,' he told DailyMail.com. 'If the government takes this case to trial, the truth will show that Mark did not cause this tragedy, he did not lie, and he should not be charged.'

He is the first person to be charged with a crime in connection with the crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia, which together killed 346 people. Families of passengers have called for more prosecutions. 

The indictment accuses Forkner of giving the Federal Aviation Administration false and incomplete information about an automated flight-control system that played a role in the crashes. He is facing six counts of fraud.

On Friday, Forkner pleaded not guilty as he made his first appearance in federal court in Fort Worth. A magistrate set trial has been set for for November 15. 

In January, Boeing agreed to a $243 million fine as part of a $2.5 billion settlement with the Justice Department. The government agreed not to prosecute Boeing for conspiracy if it lives up to terms of the settlement for three years.

Mark Forkner (above), Boeing's former chief technical pilot for the MAX, was charged with two counts of fraud involving aircraft parts in interstate commerce and four counts of wire fraud after deceiving safety regulators and giving incomplete information about flight-control system that caused two deadly 737 Boeing MAX crashes
Forkner's lawyer David Gerger (above) called his client a 'scapegoat' in the 'search for truth'

Mark Forkner (left), Boeing's former chief technical pilot for the MAX, was charged with two counts of fraud involving aircraft parts in interstate commerce and four counts of wire fraud after deceiving safety regulators and giving incomplete information about flight-control system that caused two deadly 737 Boeing MAX crashes. Forkner's lawyer David Gerger (right) said his client was being made a 'scapegoat'

Gerger is now calling on former employees of Boeing, FAA, or airlines to come forward with the truth. 

'To those of you who know the truth – you may have worked at Boeing or the FAA or an airline – now is the time to help the truth come out.,' he said in an email to DailyMail.com.

'Help us make Mark's trial a search for truth, not a search for a scapegoat.' 

Nadia Milleron, whose daughter was killed in the Ethiopian crash in March 2019, said: 'Forkner is just a fall guy. He and Boeing are responsible for the deaths of everyone who died in the Max crashes.

'The executives and board of directors of Boeing need to go to jail.'

Milleron is among relatives suing the company in federal court in Chicago, where Boeing is based.

Forkner was Boeing's 737 MAX chief technical pilot during the plane's development.

Prosecutors said that because of Forkner's 'alleged deception,' the system was not mentioned in key FAA documents, pilot manuals or pilot-training material supplied to airlines.

The flight-control system automatically pushed down the noses of 737 Max jets that crashed in 2018 in Indonesia, and in 2019 in Ethiopia. 

On October 29, 2018, the Boeing 737 MAX operating the Lion Air Flight 610 crashed into the Java Sea 13 minutes after takeoff, killing all 189 passengers and crew. 

It was the first major accident involving the new Boeing 737 MAX series of aircraft, introduced in 2017, and the highest death toll of any accident or incident involving the entire Boeing 737 series.

Five months later, on March 10, 2019, the Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft which operated Ethiopian flight 302 crashed near the town of Bishoftu, Ethiopia, six minutes after takeoff, killing all 157 people aboard. It is Ethiopian Airlines' deadliest accident to date. 

Wreckage is piled at the crash scene of Ethiopian Airlines flight 302 near Bishoftu, Ethiopia

Wreckage is piled at the crash scene of Ethiopian Airlines flight 302 near Bishoftu, Ethiopia 

The flight-control system automatically pushed down the nose of the 737 Max, including the Lion Air jet (pictured) which crashed on October 29 2018, killing 189

The flight-control system automatically pushed down the nose of the 737 Max, including the Lion Air jet (pictured) which crashed on October 29 2018, killing 189

Most pilots were unaware of the system, called the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, until after the first crash.

'He deprived airlines and pilots from knowing crucial information about an important part of the airplane's flight controls,' Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Polite Jr. said in a statement.  

Forkner was charged with two counts of fraud involving aircraft parts in interstate commerce and four counts of wire fraud. 

Federal prosecutors said he is expected to make his first appearance in court on Friday in Fort Worth, Texas. If convicted on all counts, he could face a sentence of up to 100 years in prison.

Boeing designed the Max to be a more fuel-efficient version of the venerable 737 that could compete with a plane developed by European rival Airbus.  

The flight-control system was meant to make the Max fly like previous 737s despite a tendency for the nose to tilt upward under some circumstances.

Congressional investigators have suggested that Forkner and Boeing downplayed the power of the system to avoid a requirement that pilots undergo extensive and expensive retraining, which would increase airlines' costs to operate the plane.

''This inexcusable type of corporate greed goes far beyond the chief pilot at the company that haphazardly made these aircraft in an effort to increase profits,' Robert A. Clifford, lead counsel on the Ethiopia crash, told Law and Crime

Chad Meacham, acting U.S. attorney for the northern district of Texas, said Forkner tried to save Boeing money by withholding 'critical information' from regulators.

Forkner was Boeing's 737 MAX chief technical pilot during plane's development

Forkner was Boeing's 737 MAX chief technical pilot during plane's development


'His callous choice to mislead the FAA hampered the agency's ability to protect the flying public and left pilots in the lurch, lacking information about certain 737 MAX flight controls,' Meacham said in a statement. 

Forkner's attorney David Gerger has previously said that his client would never intentionally hide a safety issue. 

'Mark flew the MAX. His Air Force buddies flew the MAX. He would never put himself, his friends or any passenger in an unsafe plane,' Gerger told the Wall Street Journal in 2019. 

The messages appeared to have been the first publicly known observations that the crucial MCAS anti-stall system behaved erratically during testing before the aircraft entered service.

Malfunctions with the MCAS system, complicated by inadequate training, were implicated in the fatal crashes of Lion Air 610 in 2018 and Ethiopian Airlines 302 just months later.  

A United Airlines Boeing 737 MAX airliner is pictured at its Renton factory in April of last year. The pane resumed service last year after being grounded for 20 months following the two fatal crashes that killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019

A United Airlines Boeing 737 MAX airliner is pictured at its Renton factory in April of last year. The pane resumed service last year after being grounded for 20 months following the two fatal crashes that killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019


The comments by Forkner in internal messages were among those pinpointed by U.S. lawmakers in hearings in Washington as evidence that Boeing knew about problems with flight control software.

Forkner persuaded regulators to approve excluding details of the new MCAS flight-control system from the 737 MAX's pilot manuals, according to a U.S. House investigation.

Boeing benefited from the exclusion, because it reduced the mandatory new training for pilots who had flown older models of the 737, making the upgraded jet more attractive to potential airline customers.

The MCAS, which kicks in automatically in some flight conditions, is intended to push the nose of the plane down to compensate for a tendency of MAX planes to pitch up due to larger engines.

Investigators believe that when it malfunctioned on the fatal flights, the pilots did not realize that the MCAS was pushing the noses of the planes down, and thus didn't take steps to disable it.  

Prosecutors are also reportedly looking at another former Boeing pilot, Patrik Gustavsson, in their criminal probe.

Forkner left Boeing in 2018 to work for Southwest Airlines, where he worked until last year. 

Early this year, Boeing agreed to pay $2.5 billion in fines and settle a criminal charge over claims they defrauded regulators overseeing the 737 MAX. Soon after the two crashes in 2019, the plane manufacturing company fired its chief executive at the time, Dennis Muilenburg.

The two crashes severely hurt Boeing¿s reputation and its relationships with airlines, regulators and policymakers. The plane manufacturing company soon fired its chief executive officer after the two crashes and the scandal has cost it billions of dollars in damages

The two crashes severely hurt Boeing's reputation and its relationships with airlines, regulators and policymakers. The plane manufacturing company soon fired its chief executive officer after the two crashes and the scandal has cost it billions of dollars in damages 

Boeing 737 MAX takes off in first US commercial flight since 2019
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The settlement attempted to pin the blame on a handful of rogue employees, stating that the misconduct was 'neither pervasive across the organization, nor undertaken by a large number of employees, nor facilitated by senior management.'

Then in May Boeing also agreed to pay a $17 million fine and improve its supply chain and production practices after installing unapproved equipment on hundreds of planes.

Boeing's 737 MAX aircraft were only cleared to return to the skies in late 2020, and the firm has also suffered from the collapse of the travel industry due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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