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The Boeing whistleblower found dead on Saturday had given stark warnings over the aviation giant's 787 Dreamliner and 737 Max models just weeks before his demise.
John Barnett, 62, was found with a 'self-inflicted' gunshot wound in the parking lot of a hotel in Charleston, South Carolina.
Barnett's attorney, Brian Knowles, told the BBC that Barnett had been in the middle of a deposition in a whistleblower lawsuit in Charleston related to production of the 787 Dreamliner plane.
The suit alleged under-pressure workers were deliberately fitting 'sub-standard' parts to Boeing 787s, and that brass were sweeping defects under the rug to save money.
The FAA has since revealed the firm failed a whopping 33 of 89 audits during an exam of its 737 Max production.
In January, Barnett appeared on TMZ to provide his take on a technical failure that saw a door fly off its hinges of a 737 - a model he said was being victimized by recent shifts in strategy along with the 787.
Former Boeing Quality Manager John Barnett, 62, issued an eerie warning back in January about two specific plane models recently involved in accidents - before turning up dead this past Saturday. He is seen in 2022
He said he had problems with how Boeing was handling its production of its 737s and 787s in particular, days after a door plug blew out on a 737 blew out at 16,000ft,
Barnett was found dead inside his truck on Saturday in the parking lot of a Holiday Inn in Charleston, pictured above
His warning would prove prophetic, as a 787 experienced a midair 'technical event' Monday injuring 50 passengers.
In January, Barnett explained why he believed both models were ticking time bombs, as both incidents remain under investigation.
'This is not a 737 problem - this is a Boeing problem,' he said after being asked if he believed the 737 was safe to fly following the door incident and a subsequent FAA inspection.
'I know the FAA is going in and done due diligence and inspections to ensure the door close on the 737 is installed properly and the fasteners are stored properly,' he said, citing the parts that likely played a part in the incident.
'But, my concern is, "What's the rest of the airplane? What's the condition of the rest of the airplane?"'
He went on to provide a reason for that concern - one that he said led him to file the lawsuit against the aviation firm.
'Back in 2012, Boeing started removing inspection operations off their jobs,' he told TMZ's Charles Latibeaudiere and Harvey Levin, recalling his time as a quality overseer at Boeing's plant in South Carolina, which manufactured mostly 787s.
'So, it left the mechanics to buy off their own work,' he explained.
Barnett went on to charge that the incident involving the door was indicative of something greater - and something alleged in his lawsuit: Boeing turning a blind eye to safety concerns in order to raise their bottom line.
'What we're seeing with the door plug blowout is what I've seen with the rest of the airplane, as far as jobs not being completed properly, inspection steps being removed, issues being ignored,' he charged, months before his sudden death.
'My concerns are with the 737 and 787, because those programs have really embraced the theory that quality is overhead and non value added.
Boeing's assembly plant in North Charleston - where the deceased worked for decades - is seen here
The plant where Barnett worked for decades is where Boeing builds the 787 Dreamliner, one of several crafts from the airliner that's made headlines as of late. Pictured: an unrelated United Airlines Boeing 787-9 takes off from Los Angeles international Airport on July 30, 2022
'Those two programs have really put a strong effort into removing quality from the process.'
The FAA appears to have stood up some of the expert's assertions after revealing how a six-week audit found 'multiple instances where [Boeing] allegedly failed to comply with manufacturing quality control requirements' of its 737s.
At one point during the exam, feds found that mechanics at Spirit AeroSystems - one of Boeing's main suppliers - used a hotel key card to check a door seal, and a liquid Dawn soap to a door seal 'as lubricant in the fit-up process.'
That action was 'not identified/documented/called-out in the production order,' a document outlining the probe said - spurring FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker to decree Boeing must develop a comprehensive plan to address such 'systemic quality-control issues' within 90 days
He sent summary of its findings to the companies in its completed audit, after an all-day February 27 meeting with CEO Dave Calhoun. He did not state the specific corrective actions Boeing and Spirit must take.
'Boeing must commit to real and profound improvements,' Whitaker explained at the time last week. 'We are going to hold them accountable every step of the way, with mutually understood milestones and expectations.'
Calhoun responded in his own statement, saying that Boeing's leadership team was 'totally committed' to addressing FAA concerns and developing the plan.
Meanwhile, Spirit, which makes the fuselage for the now scrutinized MAX, issued a statement saying it was 'in communication with Boeing and the FAA on appropriate corrective actions.'
In response, Boeing brass claimed that after the 'quality stand-downs, the FAA audit findings, and the recent expert review panel report, [the firm has] a clear picture of what needs to be done.'
As for Barnett, he outlined to TMZ in January how he began to push back at brass at the then-new South Carolina plant in 2010 when they allegedly started to pushback on his quality control of the 787 Dreamliner, one of several crafts now making headlines.
'When I first started working at Charleston, I was in charge of pushing back defects to our suppliers,' he told Latibeaudiere and Levin, appearing virtually days before heading back to the South Carolina city to handle depositions with Boeing lawyers, his attorney confirmed
'What that meant was, I'd take a group of inspectors and actually go to the supplier and inspect their product before they sent it in,' he continued.
'I'd take a team of four inspectors to Spirit Aerosystems to inspect the 41 section [the portion of an aircraft, extending from the nose to just aft of the cockpit window] before they sent it Charleston, and we found 300 defects.'
He went on: 'Some of them were significant that needed engineering intervention.
'When I returned to Charleston, my senior manager told me that we had found too many defects, and he was gonna take the next trip,' he then revealed.
'So, the next trip he went on, he took two of my inspectors, and when they got back they were given accolades for only finding 50 defects. So, I pulled that inspector aside, and I said, "did Spirit really clean up their act that quick? That don't sound right.
'And she was mad. She said, no - the inspectors were given two hours to inspect the whole 41 section and they were kicked off the airplane.'
The ex-quality manager at Boeing's North Charleston plant (seen died from a 'self-inflicted' wound, cops in Charleston said. Barnett was in the midst of a suit that alleged under-pressure workers were deliberately fitting sub-standard parts to aircraft during his tenure
The interview ended there, and within weeks, Barnett was in Charleston ironing out his ongoing lawsuit.
Days later, he was found dead in his truck in a hotel parking lot in South Carolina, his lawyer said Monday - seven years after he retired following a 32-year career.
The ex-quality manager at Boeing's North Charleston plant died from a 'self-inflicted' wound, the local coroner said - adding that cops were still investigating the death.
Two days later, roughly 50 people were treated by first responders after a Boeing 787 Dreamliner flying from Australia to New Zealand experienced a 'technical event' that caused 'a strong movement' jolting passengers in their seats.
As of writing, five remain hospitalized - after the plane dipped violently due to the unspecified issue, LATAM airline and first responders both told AFP.
Meanwhile, in a separate incident in early January, an unused emergency exit door blew off a brand-new Boeing 737 Max shortly after take-off from Portland International, sparking a still-ongoing DOJ investigation.
On Friday, shortly before the incident over the Indian Ocean, Boeing said it believed the technical failure involving the door stemmed from something that occurred during production, where required documents detailed the removal of a key part that failed were never created.
Also on Friday, the company said it is 'committed to continuing to cooperate fully and transparently with the National Transportation Safety Board's investigation,' which, more than three months later, remains ongoing.
Barnett's job for 32 years was overseeing production standards for the firm's planes - standards he said were not met during his four years at the then-new plant in Charleston from 2010 to 2014.
'The new leadership didn't understand processes,' Barnett told Corporate Crime Reporter in an interview in 2019 of how brass allegedly cut corners to get their then state-of-the-art 7878s out on time.
'They brought them in from other areas of the company,' he continued, two years after retiring in 20017. 'The new leadership team – from my director down – they all came from St. Louis, Missouri. They said they were all buddies there.'
'That entire team came down,' he went on. 'They were from the military side. My impression was their mindset was - we are going to do it the way we want to do it. Their motto at the time was - we are in Charleston and we can do anything we want.'
'They started pressuring us to not document defects, to work outside the procedures, to allow defective material to be installed without being corrected.
'They started bypassing procedures and not maintaining configurement control of airplanes, not maintaining control of non conforming parts – they just wanted to get the planes pushed out the door and make the cash register ring.
'That entire team came down,' he went on. 'They were from the military side. My impression was their mindset was - we are going to do it the way we want to do it. Their motto at the time was - we are in Charleston and we can do anything we want.'
He also said he had uncovered serious problems with the plane's oxygen systems, alleging that one in four breathing masks would not work in the event of an emergency.
Barnett's job for 32 years was overseeing production standards for the firm's planes - standards he said were not met during his four years at the then-new plant in Charleston from 2010 to 2014 as brass rushed to roll out the then new 787 Dreamliner model
Barnett claimed he alerted superiors at the plant about his misgivings, but no action was ever taken. Boeing denied this, as well as his claims.
However, a 2017 review by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) went on to stand up some of Barnett's qualms, including finding that at least 53 'non-conforming' parts - as they put it - were misplaced, and considered lost.
Boeing was ordered to take immediate remedial action, by locating and detailing the lost parts.
After the review, the company went on to also concede that it had 'identified some oxygen bottles received from the supplier that were not deploying properly', but denied Barnett's claims that any were actually fitted on aircraft.
Meanwhile, the firm is now under criminal investigation for the door incident on the Max plane this past January, during which feds will examine whether Boeing has met the conditions of the 2021 settlement reached after the fatal 2018 and 2019 crashes that killed 346 people.
The first occurred when a Max 8 operated by Indonesia's Lion Air plunged into the Java Sea in October 2018.
The second was when an Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max 8 crashed nearly straight down into a field six minutes after takeoff from Addis Ababa in March 2019.
Boeing reached a $2.5 billion settlement with the FBI and the Transportation Department in the wake of the crashes, admitting that two former employees had misled the FAA over how much training a new flight control system would require.
Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun speaks with reports at the Capitol in January after MAX 9 planes were grounded follwing the door incident. The company is now under criminal investigation
The investigation will see feds will examine whether Boeing has met the conditions of the 2021 settlement reached after the fatal 2018 and 2019 crashes that killed 346 people.
teams collect personal effects and other materials from the crash site of Ethiopian Airlines Flight in March 2019, less than a year after another 737-MAX crash in Indonesia
That crash came five months after another flight on a Boeing 737 MAX jet left 189 people dead in Indonesia. Pictured are inspectors at the site of the Lion Air Flight crash in November 2018
If the Justice Department finds that Boeing has violated the terms of that settlement, they could face prosecution on the original count of defrauding the US.
Boeing declined to comment on the criminal investigation. DailyMail.com contacted Alaska Airlines for comment.
Boeing is also facing a civil lawsuit from a group of passengers onboard the flight.
Earlier this week, the head of the National Transportation Safety Board accused Boeing of failing to provide some key records sought in its ongoing investigation into the mid-air cabin door emergency.
NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said investigators have sought the names of the 25 people who work on door plugs at a Boeing facility in Renton, Washington, but have not received them from Boeing.
'It is absurd that two months later we don't have it,' Homendy said at a Senate Commerce Committee hearing on Wednesday.
Boeing insisted that it had initially provided the NTSB with some of the names of Boeing employees, including door specialists it believed would have relevant information.
Senator Ted Cruz, the top Republican on the Commerce Committee, called it 'utterly unacceptable' that the NTSB was not receiving full cooperation from Boeing.
Homendy also confirmed that the MAX 9 door plug had moved during prior flights, citing markings on the door.
In January, the Alaska Airlines 737 suffered a near-catastrophe as a plane door blew out at 16,000ft over Portland
There were no serious injuries from the terrifying air failure, but passenger's belongings including phones flew out of the aircraft
An Alaska Airlines flight arrived in Portland with the door to its cargo space where passengers' pets were inside left slightly ajar
The door plug incident has been followed by a string of bad press for Boeing, which has made headlines in recent weeks for issues with planes - including an engine exploding on a flight out of Texas and a wheel falling off on take-off at San Francisco.
Last month, another Alaska Airlines plane landed safely in Portland with its cargo door open.
Alaska Airlines Flight 1437 from Los Cabos, Mexico, arrived at Portland International Airport and photos show the open door.
It's unclear how long the door was open for, but the flight did not require an emergency landing.
There was no indication that the door was open during the flight, according to crew members, which points to the door opening after landing.
'Upon landing at PDX on March 1, Alaska Airlines flight 1437 was discovered to have the forward cargo door unsealed,' Alaska airlines said in a statement.
'There was no indication to the crew that the door was unsealed during flight and all indications point to the door partially opening after landing.
'Our maintenance teams inspected the aircraft, replaced a spring in the door, tested the door and reentered it into service.'
Under a deal reached in 2021, the Justice Department had agreed not to prosecute the company for conspiracy to defraud the government. Families of the nearly 350 victims quickly spoke out against the decision, culminating in the lawsuit settled in October
After relocating in May, Boeing has sought to move past the fallout from the two crashes, with the wrongful death inconsistencies now serving as its last obstacle.
Such disputes over damages and the deceased’s final moments are nounusual, legal experts told the Journal, namely in states like Illinois where laws exist only allowing damages dished out for a plaintiff's grief and loss, and not suffering.
Pointing to a lack sufficient evidence the victims experienced pain and suffering between their injuries and deaths, Boeing attorneys say the company should not be liable for those proposed payments.
That battle over whether the plane maker should have to pay for the victims' suffering comes more than two years after Boeing admitted responsibility for the second crash as part of a deal to obtain legal immunity from the federal government.
The company, at the time, conceded to US District Judge Reed O'Connor that the company had conspired to defraud the United States when it lied about the planes' safety features in hearings and documents after the crashes, which left all Max jets grounded worldwide for nearly two years. That cost Boeing more than $20 billion.
The deal saw attorneys for the plaintiffs agree to take potential punitive damages off the table in the suits - of which there were roughly 80. Punitive damages refer to the amounts of money defendants are ruled to pay as part of their punishment.
Under the controversial deal, the Justice Department agreed not to prosecute the company for conspiracy to defraud the government, effectively granting it legal immunity.
Families of the victims quickly spoke out against the decision, however, demanding justice for the victims. Both Boeing and the DOJ opposed reopening the agreement.
In a court filing in November, the Justice Department said it did not oppose undoing the agreement and properly arraigning Boeing, but said undoing the agreement 'would impose serious hardships on the parties and the many victims who have received compensation.'
As backlash from families persisted, the Justice Department in January announced that it would do away with the 2021 deal - which saw the company pay $2.5 billion to the Justice Department as part of a settlement - and move forward with the manufacturer's arraignment.
At the time, Boeing’s chief safety officer, Mike Delaney, entered a not-guilty plea on behalf of the planemaker. During the arraignment, relatives of those killed decried the company, saying it 'committed the deadliest corporate crime in U.S. history.'
The planes, however, were cleared to fly again in 2021, after Boeing overhauled an automated flight-control system that activated erroneously in both crashes, after promising to look into the plane's safety issues.
Officials, however, would only choose to ground 737s after a second crash, this time in Ethiopia, just five months later.
Following an investigation in 2020, Boeing blamed both crashes on a failure in the planes’ flight control system, which caused the plane's to turn sharply downwards while in the air.
737 MAX jets were once again cleared to fly in November 2021, after two years of being grounded, with Boeing at the time branding the planes safe for passengers
Boeing had previously agreed to a $200million penalty from the Securities and Exchange Commission to settle charges that it 'negligently violated the antifraud provisions,' of US securities law.
The agency argued that just one month after the first crash, the company 'selectively highlighted certain facts, implying pilot error and poor aircraft maintenance' was what led to the crashes, instead of a technical issue.
That release failed to disclose that the company knew a key flight handling system, the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System posed safety issues and was never redesigned, the SEC argued.
Then, after the second crash, the agency said, Boeing and Muilenburg assured the public that there was 'no surprise or gap' in the federal certification of the MAX despite being aware of contrary information.
'In times of crisis and tragedy, it is especially important that public companies and executives provide full, fair, and truthful disclosures to the markets,' said SEC Chair Gary Gensler in a press release.
'The Boeing Company and its former CEO, Dennis Muilenburg, failed in this most basic obligation. They misled investors by providing assurances about the safety of the 737 MAX, despite knowing about serious safety concerns.'
The SEC said both Boeing and Muilenburg, in agreeing to pay the penalties, did not admit or deny the agency's findings.
Boeing said the agreement 'fully resolves' the SEC's inquiry and is part of the company's 'broader effort to responsibly resolve outstanding legal matters related to the 737 MAX accidents in a manner that serves the best interests of our shareholders, employees, and other stakeholders,' a company spokesman said.
'We will never forget those lost on Lion Air Flight 610 and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, and we have made broad and deep changes across our company in response to those accidents.'
Meanwhile, relatives in the remaining civil lawsuits have enlisted their own expert witnesses to help their case, and address questions regarding their family member's final moments.
One of those experts, aerospace physiologist Troy Faaborg, wrote in a court filing the victims very likely experienced issues such as panic, nausea and vomiting, heart problems during the six-minute nosedive, giving credence to their relatives argument.
Vickie Norton, a commercial airline pilot hired as a witness by the plaintiffs, also wrote: 'It wasn’t long before the progressive loss of control and ultimate dive to the ground would have been not only distressing but terror-inducing to all passengers onboard.'
Feds will now decide whether Boeing defied the terms of the deal reached this past October.
In an email Monday, the attorney handling Barnett's case called his client's death 'tragic'.
'Today is a tragic day,' Brian Knowles wrote, revealing Barnett 'was supposed to do day three of his deposition here in Charleston on his AIR21 case [on Saturday],' referring to a federal law that provides whistleblowers protection in the aviation industry.
'John had been back and forth for quite some time getting prepared,' he continued, providing a timeline of what transpired in the days before Barnett's death.
'The defense examined him for their allowed seven hours under the rules on Thursday.
'I cross examined him all day yesterday [Friday] and did not finish. We agreed to continue this morning at 10 am [co-counsel] Rob [Turkewitz] kept calling this morning and his phone would go to voicemail.
'We then asked the hotel to check on him,' the South Carolina jurist went on.
'They found him in his truck dead from an 'alleged' self-inflicted gunshot. We drove to the hotel and spoke with the police and the coroner.'
The Charleston County coroner, meanwhile, confirmed Monday the longtime Boeing staffer died Friday, while in town for interviews linked to the case.
Boeing also responded to the former worker's death in their own statement as news spread on Monday, saying it was 'saddened by Mr. Barnett's passing.'
The statement did not address any aspects of the case, but brass ultimately added: 'Our thoughts are with his family and friends.'