Boeing is being sued by families of passengers who died in the December 2024 crash of a Jeju Air Boeing 737-800. The lawsuit, filed by Seattle-based Herrmann Law Group on behalf of 14 families, claims that failures in the aircraft’s electrical and hydraulic systems prevented the pilots from landing safely.
The crash occurred on December 29, 2024, when Jeju Air flight 7C2216 was unable to deploy its landing gear and made a belly landing at Muan International Airport. The aircraft overran the runway and hit an embankment, resulting in 179 fatalities out of 181 people on board. A preliminary investigation report released in January 2025 identified a bird strike as the main cause of the accident. The final report from South Korea’s Aviation and Railway Accident Investigation Board has not yet been released.
The lawsuit argues that Boeing failed to update the 737’s electrical and hydraulic systems, which have designs dating back to the original 1968 model. Plaintiffs claim that Boeing’s “safety-first culture” declined after its 1997 merger with McDonnell Douglas. They cite a statement by former McDonnell Douglas CEO Harry Stonecipher, who later became Boeing’s president and COO, saying Boeing would be “run like a business rather than a great engineering firm.” Plaintiffs believe this marked a shift away from Boeing’s engineering-driven approach.