The software, known as MCAS (for Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System), was designed to push down the plane’s nose in certain situations. The first crash occurred in late 2018, when Lion Air Flight 610 plummeted into the sea minutes after taking off from Jakarta, Indonesia, killing all 189 people aboard. Months later, Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashed near Addis Ababa, killing all 157 on board.
The crashes devastated the families of those killed, led to a global ban on the Max, and resulted in billions of dollars of losses and fines for Boeing. The accidents dealt a big blow to the company’s reputation and invited lawsuits and government investigations. The F.A.A. approved the Max for flight again in late 2020, after requiring Boeing to make changes to the plane, and most of the rest of the world has since followed suit.
As the chief technical pilot on the Max, Mr. Forkner had discovered in 2016 that MCAS could be activated in broader conditions than initially believed, the Justice Department lawyers argued. Mr. Forkner failed to alert federal officials of that fact and subsequently urged the F.A.A. to not mention MCAS in its pilot training guidance for the Max, prosecutors said.
Mr. Gerger had previously described the trial as “a search for a scapegoat.”
Boeing reached its settlement with the Justice Department in January 2021, agreeing to pay billions of dollars, mostly in financial compensation to airlines. The families of more than a dozen crash victims recently criticized that deal and said that federal officials left them in the dark before it was announced. They are seeking to revoke protection afforded to Boeing from further criminal prosecution on the matter.