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Southwest, Pilot Unions Get Subpoenas for 737 Max Documents

Investigators are probing Boeing’s development of the Max, a popular single-aisle model that’s been grounded since mid-March.

Southwest, Pilot Unions Get Subpoenas for 737 Max Documents
Boeing employees walk by a new Boeing built at Boeing Field in Seattle. (Photographer: Barry Sweet/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Southwest Airlines Co. joined the list of organizations -- currently including pilot unions from Southwest, United Continental Holdings Inc. and American Airlines Group Inc. -- receiving federal grand jury subpoenas for documents relating to Boeing Co.’s grounded 737 Max.

Southwest is cooperating fully with the request, company spokeswoman Brandy King said in a statement Saturday. The airline has the largest Max fleet, with 34 planes and additional orders for more than 200.
The Southwest Airlines Pilots Association was given until May 24 to comply with the demand from the U.S. Justice Department’s criminal division, union President Jon Weaks said Friday. The Air Line Pilots Association, which represents aviators at United and other carriers, said it also received a subpoena. The Allied Pilots Association, whose members work for American, got one as well, said a person familiar with the matter.

Investigators are probing Boeing’s development of the Max, a popular single-aisle model that’s been grounded since mid-March after crashing twice in five months. In both disasters, a new software system known as MCAS repeatedly shoved the nose of the doomed jets down, eventually overwhelming pilots. Congress and the Transportation Department also are examining the Federal Aviation Administration’s approval of the aircraft.

“I don’t know what aspect they are investigating,” Weaks said in an interview. “They just want to know what we have on the Max. We knew it would come eventually.”

Max Operators

The Southwest pilots’ union will probably seek an extension of the deadline because of the time needed to search through documents, emails and other papers for Max-related items, he said.

At least one former Boeing engineer has also been subpoenaed in connection with the Max, the best-selling plane in the company’s history.

U.S. investigators began a probe weeks after a Lion Air Max 8 plunged into the Java Sea off the coast of Indonesia on Oct. 29. An Ethiopian Airlines jet crashed minutes after takeoff from Addis Ababa on March 10, bringing the death toll from the two accidents to 346. The Max, the newest version of the 737, began flying commercially in May 2017.

A law enforcement agent with the Transportation Department Inspector General’s office has contacted at least one FAA official to ask how the MCAS system was certified, Bloomberg reported in March. Another facet of the inquiry has focused on why Boeing didn’t flag the feature in pilot manuals.

A Congressional hearing is set for May 15.

--With assistance from Justin Bachman.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mary Schlangenstein in Dallas at maryc.s@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Case at bcase4@bloomberg.net, Susan Warren

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.