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Reuters —Boeing said on Friday that Ted Colbert, president and CEO of its defense, space and security unit will be leaving the company effective immediately. “I’d like to share that Ted Colbert, president and CEO of Boeing Defense, Space & Security (BDS), will be leaving Boeing, and that l’ve asked Steve Parker to temporarily oversee BDS, effective immediately, until a replacement for Ted is named at a later date,” Kelly Ortberg, Boeing’s president and CEO, said Friday in a statement. In the most recent quarter, Boeing’s Defense, Space & Security unit lost $913 million, up from the $527 million loss in the same period a year ago, after a narrow profit in the first quarter. But both the second quarter loss and the 2023 full-year loss were more than the company’s troubled commercial aircraft unit lost in the same periods. Boeing’s shares closed down about 1% on Friday and have lost about 41% so far this year.
Persons: Ted Colbert, Steve Parker, , l’ve, Ted, ” Kelly Ortberg, , Utkarsh, Shounak Dasgupta Organizations: Reuters, Boeing, Boeing Defense, Space & Security, BDS, Boeing Company, Boeing’s Defense, & $ Locations: Bengaluru
Boeing agreed to plead guilty to a charge that it defrauded the Federal Aviation Administration, hiding crucial information about a design flaw on the 737 Max during its original certification process. Boeing attorneys had it as part of their mission to make sure that its executives did not face any criminal charges, Lindquist said. A Boeing spokesman said the company had no comment about the anticipated guilty plea or the case beyond a brief statement confirming the agreement. Another way to make executives payEven if there are no criminal charges brought against executives, they can face significant penalties, Arlen said. Why Boeing will keep its government contractsThe most serious penalty that Boeing could face is by far the least likely – it could be barred from federal government contracts due to its guilty plea.
Persons: Critics, , Peter Goeltz, Goeltz, “ I’m, Moody’s, Paul Cassell, Jemal Countess, , Mark Lindquist, Lindquist, FAA ”, Mark Forkner, ” Lindquist, there’s, that’s, Arlen, Dave Calhoun, Dennis Muilenburg, Calhoun, Max, Patrick Ryder, Robert Clifford, – CNN’s Natasha Bertrand Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, National Transportation Safety Board, CNN, , Alaska Airlines, Justice Department, FAA, Volkswagen, University of Utah, Ethiopian Airlines, Max, Alaska Air, DOJ, , Department of Defense, Pentagon, Air Force, Department of Justice, they’re Boeing Locations: New York, Alaska, Indonesia
WASHINGTON April 5 (Reuters) - Boeing Co (BA.N) confirmed on Wednesday it had restarted deliveries of its widebody 767 after a three-month pause caused by supplier quality issues. The U.S. planemaker was forced to halt deliveries of the 767F freighter and KC-46 tanker earlier this year after it discovered center fuel tanks made by a supplier were not properly sealed. Boeing declined to comment on when 767 deliveries restarted, but flight data shows it handed over a 767F freighter to FedEx on March 24. The same day, Boeing’s defense unit tweeted that a KC-46 tanker had been delivered to the U.S. Air Force. Stan Deal, head of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, told reporters last week that the company would resume 767 freighter deliveries “shortly,” with KC-46 tanker deliveries following afterwards.
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