Boeing plea deal over fatal 737 MAX crashes rejected by judge
128 points
20 days ago
| 4 comments
| bloomberg.com
| HN
hx8
20 days ago
[-]
Boeing is becoming a national embarrassment. We discuss this ad nauseam every time a post about them makes it to the front page. I think this is a sign that their reputation is beginning to be worth less, and more people in the system are going to be more critical. This one case won't penalize Boeing enough that they return to a more quality focused culture. Maybe there aren't enough legal penalties to do so. I wish I could see a feasible path to Boeing redemption.
reply
lenerdenator
20 days ago
[-]
Here's the path:

1. Imprison executives who made the decisions that led to the result. Preferably in a way that makes them spend their fortunes on legal costs so that when they get out in 20-30 years, they're dependent on social safety nets for the rest of their natural lives. People are dead because they thought that possibility of profit was worth the risk of hundreds of deaths. That's negligent homicide.

2. There is no 2.

reply
kiba
20 days ago
[-]
I don't think making an example out of those executives are going to do anything in particular. Stripping them out of their position and banning them from holding executive positions will. Forcing Boeing to reorganize their structural incentive will. Forcing shareholders to take a haircut means that they will likely hold the board more accountable will.

Like, nobody really think about risking people's lives for slightly more profit. It's more like they think about "cutting cost to get promotion and make more money. What risk? There's no risk.".

It's not like Boeing are particularly competent. Their projects experienced cost overrun for example. This whole idea of outsourcing to individual contractors turned out to make development of aircraft even more expensive. Their space division is currently blowing another hole in their budget. Their Starliner program is a joke and has no future beyond the ISS.

Some people may need to go to jail because it's more than just gross incompetence, fair enough. I am just skeptical of long lengthy sentences.

reply
tivert
20 days ago
[-]
> Stripping them out of their position and banning them from holding executive positions will.

You mean a golden parachute? I don't think that will deter anything.

I think the GP is on the right track. Business leaders need fear consequences, so they moderate their behavior, and that means messages must be sent. It would be perfect to have some fortune 100 CEO go to Davos one year, then return the next in a prison jumpsuit to tell all the collected elites about what it feels like to be utterly ruined. Then do it again and again until the message gets through.

reply
kiba
20 days ago
[-]
If they can't work another executive job, they can't go around harming other businesses and people. The first thing that should happen is that the bad actions stop happening, by whatever means necessary. Justice can come later if that's truly necessary.

I think the GP is on the right track. Business leaders need fear consequences, so they moderate their behavior, and that means messages must be sent. It would be perfect to have some fortune 100 CEO go to Davos one year, then return the next in a prison jumpsuit to tell all the collected elites about what it feels like to be utterly ruined. Then do it again and again until the message gets through.

There's no need to resort to extreme measure, unless things are truly beyond the pale. It matters far more that regulations are enforced and consequences are enacted. Consequence don't need to be dire, unless actions are so beyond the pale that it required criminal investigations and consequences. If things escalated to the point of criminal investigation, your system isn't working.

The first step is early detection, enforcement, and auditing. The FAA should be beefed up so that they can rely on their own agents for enforcing the rules, together with the ability to ramp up fines, stop production, and other gradual escalation until there are compliance to regulation.

reply
buffington
20 days ago
[-]
> unless things are truly beyond the pale

What does that mean to you? People have died in fatal 737 Max crashes - is that not truly beyond the pale?

reply
bigiain
20 days ago
[-]
> Consequence don't need to be dire

Sometimes, consequences _do_ need to be dire.

I had a boss once who used to calm everybody down when things were going badly saying "It's OK. Nobody is going to die." And he was right. We just build websites. No matter which customer was yelling on the phone like the world was ending, it was at worst a website outage.

But some jobs, you can't say "Nobody is going to die." Canonically these are rocket science and brain surgery. But building airliners is 100% a job where if you don't do it right people are going to die. And airliners are more serious, brain surgery kills one patient when you make a mistake, rocket science kills a few astronauts. Faulty airliners kill hundreds of passengers at once.

In my opinion, consequences for trading off even small increases in risk of death for hundreds of people at once just to meet financial targets _should_ be dire.

reply
kiba
20 days ago
[-]
Minor consequences are guardrail before major consequences come into play. If you don't have feedback mechanism for minor infractions, problem will pile up.

Boeing didn't kill people overnight, it comes as gradual escalation and ignoring boneheaded mistakes over and over again.

If someone is being investigated for crime, the problem with the company began a long time ago. Consequences doesn't matter because what was minor issues became big issues.

Dire consequences doesn't do anything. You're looking at justice not prevention.

reply
thrownv7032g
20 days ago
[-]
Heads this works and we make billions and I make 100M; tails it goes bad but I get 10M. That's a high expected return bet you should always make.
reply
soulofmischief
20 days ago
[-]
The problem is the elites also have ownership in the prison industry and control of the government.
reply
mcculley
20 days ago
[-]
What about putting shareholders in jail?
reply
anonym29
20 days ago
[-]
A great solution to disincentivize all investment into capital markets - bankrupting thousands of companies, resulting in hundreds of thousands if not millions of layoffs and widespread economic devastation not seen in the U.S. since the great depression.

Should we also start imprisoning everyone who voted for Obama because Obama's DoD conducted drone strikes against weddings, churches, and other civilian facilities and gatherings resulting in more civilian deaths than Bush's?

Shareholders are no more responsible for the misdeeds of management than voters are for the misdeeds of politicians, after all.

Your proposal goes against the core tenants of justice, liability, and property rights that have guided the civilization responsible for every part of your life that you cherish - from the device and connection you're posting with to the appliances that you cannot live without, to the economic systems that have lifted more human beings out of poverty than any other economic system ever conceived.

What's the argument in favor of your proposal that outweighs these cons?

P.S. - I upvoted your comment because as much as I vehemently disagree with your proposal, I believe we should all have the decency to discuss ideas we disagree with rather than attempt to censor them.

reply
mcculley
20 days ago
[-]
I appreciate you treating the question in the way it was intended: A thought experiment.

Our system does not treat seriously the bad behavior of corporations. It is a way for shareholders to get only the upside and not suffer the consequences.

Long ago, I divested from a mutual fund when I realized that it made me an indirect owner of Philip Morris. As shareholders, we can make choices that harm people and yet we risk no consequences beyond losing our investment.

If it is a serious argument that we should jail more CEOs, then all who profit from criminal corporate behavior should be punished.

reply
anonym29
20 days ago
[-]
I applaud your willingness to put people over profits, but there is still a part of your (conditional) statement that makes me quite uncomfortable:

>then all who profit from criminal corporate behavior should be punished.

American, European, and British citizens profit from exploitation of the global south, exploitation that often includes violence. Should all American, European, and British citizens be punished simply for being beneficiaries of activity they don't necessarily endorse or support?

What about shareholders who didn't make a choice to purchase shares of the companies in question, like recipients of pensions where the pension fund purchased shares in pursuit of producing a return for the workers they have promised to support financially?

reply
mcculley
20 days ago
[-]
The first part of your question seems like a different question to me. We have fundamental problems within our own legal framework that allow us to capture only the upside, which is the issue I am bringing up. You are expanding this to other jurisdictions. I think this is a fair question, but a different subject.

I am not convinced that we should jail shareholders. I am also not convinced that legal entities designed to limit liability should exist.

As for the second part of your question about those who inadvertently and ignorantly own shares in criminal enterprises, I think it is a good question and I do not have an answer. Maybe pension funds should be responsible for their investments.

reply
hx8
20 days ago
[-]
As much as I agree with investing alongside your values, I don't think holding shareholders criminally liable for the companies they own fits alongside my concept of justice. Reasons why I'm against shareholder criminal liability

* Shareholders do not directly commit crimes. We should hold those that directly commit the crime liable.

* Shareholders often hold assets that hold stocks. Should I be responsible if I own an index fund with stocks in a company that owns stocks in a company that commits a crime?

* Shareholders do not have perfect information about the inside operations of a company. I cannot read internal emails to determine if I own a shares in a company that is planning on committing a crime.

* Shareholders can physically be outside of the legal jurisdictions that the company is operating from. Is it fair if Venezuelan shareholders are effectively unpunished while US resident shareholders are held responsible?

reply
mcculley
20 days ago
[-]
These are all good questions.

If shareholders were legally responsible for the actions of the companies they own, they would expect and be entitled to more transparency.

I remain unconvinced that the system we were born into just happens to be the right way to do things. I can currently extract profit by owning pieces of corporations that harm individuals and society. This seems less than ideal to me.

reply
bigiain
20 days ago
[-]
> A great solution to disincentivize all investment into capital markets

While I agree with your argument here, that opening line really raises questions.

Do we want "capital markets" at all if they're structured in a way that incentivizes risking innocent people's lives to reward the market participants with increased profits, without any equivalently existential consequences when that risk goes bad and hundreds of people die as the next Boeing airliner ploughs a hole in the ground?

Something's deeply wrong with how things work now, and capitalism is looking awfully like the root cause.

reply
anonym29
20 days ago
[-]
>Something's deeply wrong with how things work now, and capitalism is looking awfully like the root cause.

I don't refute that there are big problems with how things are currently being run, but what evidence exists suggesting that an alternative economic system is the solution?

Please correct me if I'm wrong, but China has far more industrial accidents and avoidable deaths than the US does, no?

We also didn't have the same extent of the kinds of problems being discussed here in the past, while the US was still a capitalist country then too, right?

That makes me ponder whether a change in the implementation of capitalism is to be blamed more so than capitalism itself - if not a combination of that and other factors unrelated to the economic system.

It's not difficult to draw a line back to when we shifted away from a more "stakeholder-y" capitalism towards shareholder value maximization as a motif, but that begs the question: why were we more unified and stakeholder oriented back then, but not so much anymore, if the rationale behind shareholder value maximization was as true then as it is now?

reply
AstralStorm
20 days ago
[-]
"But China" doesn't say as much against non-capitalist systems as you think it does.

It still runs capitalism, just more state controlled. It's the mirror side of the corporate-controlled government of the US.

Shareholder value maximization is not what changed, but zero regulation happened, and securitization so that nobody knows where to really go with pitchfork and torches. Probably somewhere overseas to seize random tax haven assets.

reply
smackeyacky
20 days ago
[-]
It's far more that "regulatory capture" is the root cause here. That Boeing knowingly and deliberately played fast and loose with the rules around how the 737 MAX was certified and got away with it because they had outsize influence with the FAA.

It's not exactly capitalism, but it is a regulatory failure that exposes the corruption of the institutions that oversee Boeing. Corruption is the cause.

reply
mcculley
19 days ago
[-]
Leftists have a coherent argument about this: Capitalism always results in corruption because capital can influence/buy government.

Our implementation mostly uses lobbying and the revolving door instead of direct bribes, but nevertheless results in 737 MAX.

Maybe we can improve the system in the U.S. and make it less corrupt. I hope so, but I am not very optimistic.

I want free markets, free trade, private property, and the capitalism that arises from these forces. But our current implementation is not proving itself to be ideal.

reply
tivert
20 days ago
[-]
> Shareholders are no more responsible for the misdeeds of management than voters are for the misdeeds of politicians, after all.

That's BS. Big shareholders can get seats on the board of directors and have influence over management decision-making.

Jail time for shareholders is probably going too far in most circumstances, but forfeiture of shares is pretty reasonable.

reply
anonym29
20 days ago
[-]
>but forfeiture of shares is pretty reasonable.

From who, and to who?

From only those big shareholders with seats on the board, from the "little guy", or from both?

What happens to the forfeited shares in your proposal? Are we redistributing them? Are they getting nationalized? Mandatory buybacks? Destruction of those shares, increasing the voting power of the other shares?

reply
nradov
20 days ago
[-]
Seizing shares without paying compensation at the market rate would be flatly unconstitutional. There's really no question about that, it's a settled legal issue.
reply
tivert
20 days ago
[-]
> Seizing shares without paying compensation at the market rate would be flatly unconstitutional. There's really no question about that, it's a settled legal issue.

I don't think so. The scenario isn't an eminent domain "give it up 'cause we want that property" it's "you did wrong [because it did wrong and you own it], and this is your punishment." It's basically a fine, and fines aren't unconstitutional.

Furthermore, in this specific case, Boeing has plead guilty to a felony, which makes the existence of a legal wrong pretty crystal clear.

reply
nradov
20 days ago
[-]
You may not "think" so, but you would be completely wrong because you're ignorant about the basics of US law. Boeing as a corporation and their shareholders are separate legal entities.
reply
ryandrake
20 days ago
[-]
I know this is crazy talk, but with enough political will, US law can actually be changed.
reply
nradov
20 days ago
[-]
Yes, that's literally crazy talk. Boeing shareholders haven't broken any law currently on the books. Regardless of what Boeing (the corporation) and its employees might have done there is zero political will to change the US Constitution Article I, Section 9, Clause 3, or the 5th Amendment. Not going to happen in our lifetimes.

https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/artI-S9-C3-3-...

https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/amdt5-9-1/ALD...

The level is aggressive ignorance that we see in HN comments about legal issues is both hilarious and depressing. Most HN users are educated US citizens and yet somehow they're still ignorant about the basics. I guess that's an indictment of our educational system?

reply
tivert
19 days ago
[-]
I think you're confusing talk about what to do about similar future infractions with what to do about this current infraction.

Also, do you think the fine for a parking ticket is a taking? Does the government have to compensate me for the fair market value of the money it took? You application to the takings clause to these kids of scenarios is absurd.

reply
nradov
19 days ago
[-]
Wow, you're really confused about the basics of constitutional law. How sad. Boeing as a corporation is in the process of pleading guilty to a crime, and as part of that they can be punished in a variety of ways such as fine. But Boeing shareholders haven't been accused of any crime and are not defendants in this case. The shareholders are legally separate from the corporation. There is no legal mechanism to seize their shares as punishment, and hypothetically if Boeing were to be forcibly nationalized then the government would be forced to pay shareholders at the market rate.
reply
rolandog
20 days ago
[-]
Exactly: "everything punishable should be punished, everywhere across the decision chain, all at once".

No sternly worded letter, no slap on the wrist... Consequences!

I'd even "scare them incorrupt" by threatening to nationalize the company if no sufficient corrective actions are implemented to stop being a net negative to society.

reply
tivert
20 days ago
[-]
> I'd even "scare them incorrupt" by threatening to nationalize the company if no sufficient corrective actions are implemented to stop being a net negative to society.

Now that's the way to discipline the shareholders, which is a different problem than disciplining the leaders.

The "401k objection" is often used as cover by the defenders of those people, in a ploy to avoid accountability: "shares are held by all kinds of common people in their 401ks, and all you be doing is punishing those innocents!" My answer to that is to require public companies (with brokerages) to maintain a registry of the beneficial owners of their shares, then just nationalize the shares of the largest shareholders (as those are the people/organization with any real influence).

As for predictable objections of "it's impossible to collect that info1!1" they're already 90% of the way there, because they already know where to mail proxy statements. I think you can get the rest of the way with extra reporting requirements and onerous penalties for non-compliance (e.g. forfeiting the shares after a suitable grace period or if there is evidence of evasion).

reply
rolandog
14 days ago
[-]
Hmm, I have to confess I need to give more thought and understand the consequences of what you're proposing. I do like the idea of selectively punishing the most responsible actors.

Out of curiosity, if one were to "steelman" my proposal... If nationalization of companies were a consequence of public companies behaving badly, would it not pressure shareholders to divest from bad actors, rather than doubling down on those whose leaders lacking moral scruples?

What I'm trying to ask is: wouldn't it result in a better (moderately regulated) "free market" if there were consequences to leaders and shareholders alike?

reply
ryandrake
20 days ago
[-]
That's always the excuse that gets trotted out whenever anyone even suggests punishing a corporation for wrongdoing: "Bbbbbut what about Middle Class Joe and Jane whose pensions and 401(k)s might go down slightly? Won't someone think of the 401(k) owners?" That and "Bbbbbut the jobs! If you punish a company, they'll have to fire people!" Those two combined are enough to scare the general public into allowing companies do whatever the hell they want.

Maybe if regulators grew a sack and started absolutely deleting companies for wrongdoing, people would think twice before they invest in them or the various institutional funds that invest in them. Wishful thinking.

reply
nradov
20 days ago
[-]
Nationalization would be an empty threat. The government has no statutory authority to do that. We don't live in a dictatorship.
reply
buffington
20 days ago
[-]
The US government has this authority, and has quite likely used this authority in your lifetime.
reply
sgt101
20 days ago
[-]
I think you are onto something. There's often a threat to make companies pay 4% of their global turn over or something, but it would be more effective to make them issue voting shares with a value of 4% of their equity to the goverment - who could then sell them. If stockholders were threatened with a 4% dilution then they'd be much more vigilant than if the company has to pay a fine - which in the end shareholders will pass on to customers.

Also I think that governments are wary of destabalising companies with big fines - especially banks. A shareholder dilution will not threaten the finances of structurally important entities.

reply
evoke4908
20 days ago
[-]
It's really very extremely simple.

You're in charge of a safety-critical business.

You make decisions that trade safety for profit.

People die.

You are charged with murder and go to jail for a very long time, just like any regular citizen.

This really should not be controversial or complicated. If you kill people, there are consequences. That's how the world works for 99.9999% of the human race. The same standard should be applied to CEOs as the proxy for the corporate entity that they are.

To argue anything else is to argue that so long as you have enough money, it's perfectly acceptable to kill as many people as you want in as gruesome a fashion as you'd like.

The price of being a scumsucking robber baron murdering thousands of people for profit should be extreme. The profits gained from such behavior should be clawed back with the full force of government from any source even remotely related. The company should be gutted and auctioned off, or nationalized if they're "too big to fail". Investors immediately and irrevocably lose all stakes, no exceptions. All recovered moneys should be distributed to victims and families.

Boeing never should have happened and it should never happen again. But this behavior and exploitation and mass murder will not stop so long as it's profitable and murderers just walk away with zero repercussions and keep their billions in blood money.

Boeing is not a case of incompetence. This is a case of pure and simple greed. They've ignored safety reports and FAA guidance. They even rigged the FAA inspection process to let them rubber-stamp things in-house (while ignoring failing reports). This has been a long decline and they've made the worst decisions the entire time.

Even if it were incompetence or ignorance, it absolutely does not matter. If you run over a kid because you were texting or simply not paying attention to the road, you go to jail. If your incompetence leads to hundreds and thousands of deaths, you should be just as culpable.

Stop making excuses for billionaire mass murders. Drag them to the gallows instead.

reply
kiba
20 days ago
[-]
It's really very extremely simple.

You're in charge of a safety-critical business.

You make decisions that trade safety for profit.

People die.

Let me use a different example.

People die all the time in motor accident all the time. It is a regular occurrence that close calls happen all the time, sometime with nobody's fault. The solution for like 90% of time is actually simple but also politically unpalatable: just reduce the amount of driving that's needed to be done. You don't need more traffic police or amazing self driving technology or draconian punishment. You can then concentrate your police resources on stuff elsewhere that matters.

That's it.

Advocating draconian consequences isn't really going to move the needle. Maybe it will even scare all the risk adverse CEOs and now you have dangerous executives in charge who will be insensitive to the consequence of possibly serving jailtime and being ruined.

Plus, there's also time and money wasted in pursuing extreme punishment. Beyond past a certain point, there's going to be no meaningful difference. What's the difference of being in utterly extreme pain and being in utterly extreme pain 1000x?

reply
bdangubic
20 days ago
[-]
> You're in charge of a safety-critical business...

This sounds super amazing but where do you stop? I am software developer working on the latest cool algorithm to control traffic lights to help with congestion. I fuck up, green turns on opposite sides of the road, car accident, 10 people instantly dead. I go to jail as lead dev on software that runs?! CEO goes to jail because project may have required 10 QA people but he only hired 3 to save a few bucks...?

These things is why you have government and you have regulation. We put people in offices whose job is large part is to protect the citizens. Expecting a CEO to act in the best interest of citizens is like trusting a fat kid around apple pie :)

reply
greenavocado
20 days ago
[-]
> Stripping them out of their position and banning them from holding executive positions will

Do you know what this means? It means getting the UHC treatment.

reply
brokencode
20 days ago
[-]
Murder is murder, and nobody deserves that kind of treatment. It makes our society worse, not better.
reply
legitster
20 days ago
[-]
The idea that severe punishment for executive failure will lead to improved executive decision making I don't think bears out.

When dictators publicly executed advisor 1 and then advisor 2 and then advisor 3, they would still manage to always find someone greedy/desperate enough to want to take a crack on chance #4 or #5. But it did nothing to make the advisors better, it just meant that the next guy had to be even more greedy or desperate.

reply
TulliusCicero
20 days ago
[-]
That's not an analogous situation.

It's entirely possible to run a company like Boeing in a responsible way that's still profitable. Indeed, that used to be true for Boeing itself.

reply
Sebb767
20 days ago
[-]
And the parent comment does not disagree with this. It's just that harsh punishment for executives might not improve the selection - in fact, it might be adverse selection, since increasing the risk will lead actually good people to avoid the position.
reply
izacus
20 days ago
[-]
Are you seriously claiming that people would avoid position with millions of compensation just because their poor decision making could lead to the same consequences many of the worker class need to endure for their actions?
reply
sgt101
20 days ago
[-]
Unfortunately I think that's a hard yes - because these people don't have to accept these positions. I think that this kind of high stakes gambling is part of the problem here...

Much better to defuse responsibility in the executive suite and pressure shareholders in general to ensure good governance.

reply
sdwr
20 days ago
[-]
People who value their peace of mind or long term safety might.

Reckless, impulsive, emotionally empty people won't be deterred at all

reply
TulliusCicero
20 days ago
[-]
> And the parent comment does not disagree with this

I think it kinda does? Dictators tend to demand unethical behavior from subordinates, and they tend to demand loyalty more than results while also expecting results.

reply
Eddy_Viscosity2
20 days ago
[-]
We should try it and find out how well it works. Its very different situation then the dictator/advisor. Our current approach of doing nothing isn't working, so lets innovate and disrupt the CEO racket with accountability and penalties.
reply
freddie_mercury
20 days ago
[-]
There are plenty of countries that put executives in prison. Vietnam just upheld an execution sentence for Truong My Lan in a case of financial fraud. Trinh Xuan Thanh was kidnapped from the streets of Berlin and flown back to Vietnam to serve a prison sentence for financial mismanagement of Petrovietnam Construction Joint Stock Corporation.

Ask anyone in Vietnam if they think the very common prison sentences for executives has led to positive material changes and they will laugh at the idea.

reply
Eddy_Viscosity2
20 days ago
[-]
Did it make it worse? If you asked the Vietnamese people if Truong My Lan should be released and given back all her wealth, power, and position. Would they say yes?
reply
dboreham
20 days ago
[-]
Responsibility will turn out to be so diffuse that no individuals will be found to be liable. This is a superpower of large organizations and permeates our daily lives. Also one of the main reasons government regulation is always required. And why capatilist bros are constantly wittering about removing regulation.
reply
lenerdenator
20 days ago
[-]
> Responsibility will turn out to be so diffuse that no individuals will be found to be liable.

Au contraire. Most executives will justify their pay packages by saying they shoulder all of the risk.

Well, what risk? Losing their jobs? When you make in a year what most people make in an entire career, that's not a risk. Losing their wealth? See the prior statement, but take into account that they have money managers who are paid to do nothing but diversify holdings and manage risk. They can't be held liable in a civil suit as individuals; that's the entire point of incorporation.

Either they have risk to justify their compensation or they don't. They don't. So we need to find some risk.

When you look for another way to assign risk to increase the quality of the decisions made by c-suites, Leavenworth starts to look like a fairly attractive option.

And it would be for the convicted, when you consider that the crimes actually happened in Indonesia and Ethiopia.

reply
thmsths
20 days ago
[-]
I fully agree. We need to adopt the same mindset they have in maritime tradition: the buck stops at the captain. If you're in charge you're responsible for the misdeeds of the people working for you. It does not matter that you did not explicitly order the bad thing or that someone took an initiative without your knowledge. At that level of pay/power/responsibility, "It was not me"/"I did not know" are NOT acceptable defenses.

As the CEO you're in a unique position to ask for more controls, more safety, more audit. So unless you went above and beyond and things were truly out of your control, then yes, you should be held responsible when disaster strikes. If you think this is too much risk, then you're free to walk from the job (and the 8 figures pay package).

reply
bgirard
20 days ago
[-]
Exactly. When you make the CEO responsible for things that they don't have direct visibility into normally it's amazing how suddenly they staff new positions/departments/orgs with competent folks with legitimate resources and power to oversee it properly.

We should not accept large organizations, bureaucracy and lack of visibility as a deference.

reply
richwater
20 days ago
[-]
All you're doing would be to kill companies above a certain size as literally every company makes mistakes and thus no one would have any interest in going to jail. A fantastic way to ruin the economy frankly.
reply
thmsths
20 days ago
[-]
I am not advocating for a zero tolerance approach. In the example I mentioned, the navy, there are plenty of times when the inquiry into a disaster absolved the captain of the blame. All I am saying is that CEOs should be held to the same standards we hold licensed professions such as lawyers, doctors, engineers or pilots. Aka if something goes wrong we will scrutinize their behavior in the lead up and then determine if they took reasonable steps to prevent the issue.

In that framework a CEO putting "safety first" will not have to worry in case a black swan events happen, it's the CEO who decided to do some "cost optimization" that will have to answer if the company routinely kills or injures people.

reply
gruez
20 days ago
[-]
>Au contraire. Most executives will justify their pay packages by saying they shoulder all of the risk.

Feels like a strawman, or at least a misunderstanding of what "responsibility" is. Shareholders are willing to pay dearly for executives not because they need a fall guy in case something go wrong, they do so because someone in that position can easily fuck up the business, and therefore it's worth paying extra to get someone more qualified (at least in theory), so that doesn't happen. It's not any different than you not picking the cheapest guy on cragislist to housesit when you're on vacation. The premium isn't because you want a fall guy to sue in case your house burns down, it's so you don't end up with a guy who fucks up your house while you're away.

reply
lenerdenator
20 days ago
[-]
Shareholders couldn't care less if someone fucks up the house. Most corporate shares in the US are held by retirement and pension funds. Those funds are run by people who are paid to make sure that they can divest from a position relatively quickly and with minimal loss in value. Many of them diversify their holdings and are perfectly fine with someone screwing the company so long as it bumps the number at quarter's end. Jack Welch is an excellent example of this.

For further evidence, see how the market reacted to the murder of United Healthcare's CEO yesterday. The stock barely moved when the news broke and is still up for the month as of about half-an-hour ago. That's not the behavior of a market that sees the CEO as a watchful guardian of assets and a risk-bearer of corporate decisions; it's the behavior of a market that sees everyone as utterly disposable.

The only reason they're down today is because speculators are beginning to worry that they'll run out of executives to refuse to enter into the marketplace of sane solutions to America's healthcare cost crisis.

reply
gruez
20 days ago
[-]
>Shareholders couldn't care less if someone fucks up the house. Most corporate shares in the US are held by retirement and pension funds. Those funds are run by people who are paid to make sure that they can divest from a position relatively quickly and with minimal loss in value. Many of them diversify their holdings and are perfectly fine with someone screwing the company so long as it bumps the number at quarter's end. Jack Welch is an excellent example of this.

Activist investors and private equity are a counter to this. If it's really true that companies are ineptly run that all it takes is for someone who cares to turn it around, it should be easy to make a bunch of money by buying a company, exercising the tiniest of shareholder pressure over management, and then selling it after the company's turned around. Moreover, this strategy working would mean it's possible to get above average returns, which all institutional investors would be interested in. The board of Harvard isn't going to be very happy with their investment manager if Stanford is getting 1.5x returns by exercising good corporate governance. That's not to say corporate governance is prefect for all companies. The fact that activist investors exist at all suggests some companies at least are performing below average, but the claim that "Shareholders couldn't care less if someone fucks up the house" is delusional.

>For further evidence, see how the market reacted to the murder of United Healthcare's CEO yesterday. The stock barely moved when the news broke and is still up for the month as of about half-an-hour ago. That's not the behavior of a market that sees the CEO as a watchful guardian of assets and a risk-bearer of corporate decisions; it's the behavior of a market that sees everyone as utterly disposable.

counterpoint: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-08-13/new-starb...

reply
lenerdenator
20 days ago
[-]
> Activist investors and private equity are a counter to this. If it's really true that companies are ineptly run that all it takes is for someone who cares to turn it around, it should be easy to make a bunch of money by buying a company, exercising the tiniest of shareholder pressure over management, and then selling it after the company's turned around.

That's literally what happened at my last company. Actually they didn't even have to turn it around. They just destroyed employee morale with layoffs and got Oracle to buy the place, and they've gutted the company further.

Which isn't good when you consider that it's EMR software, but, hey. It's been a profitable gutting, meaning that it's good for everyone from shareholders to doctors to patients.

reply
thmsths
20 days ago
[-]
You're assuming it must be one OR the other. Why can't it be both? If you're rewarded for your good decisions, it seems normal to also be punished for the bad ones, in a proportional manner.
reply
gruez
20 days ago
[-]
>Why can't it be both?

I wasn't making a normative claim, only disagreeing with OP's characterization that executives' pay packages are justified by the threat of going to jail.

>If you're rewarded for your good decisions, it seems normal to also be punished for the bad ones, in a proportional manner.

FAANG engineers are paid pretty well. Should they go to jail (or even fined 5-6 figure sums) for bugs they're responsible for?

reply
thmsths
20 days ago
[-]
Bugs are simply not comparable to losing 2 aircrafts and killing hundreds of people, furthermore FAANG engineers have little impact on the org individually. But we already have that kind of threats for malpractice in several fields, if an engineer or doctor makes a mistake resulting in injuries or death they will be held responsible financially and sometimes criminally.
reply
gruez
20 days ago
[-]
>Bugs are simply not comparable to losing 2 aircrafts and killing hundreds of people

Software bugs caused 900 miscarriages of justice and "at least four suicides"[1]. The Crowdstirke bug caused millions of machines to go down and bililons in damage[2]. Sure, that might not compare to crashing 2 planes, but it feels entirely arbitrary to exclude those two cases.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Post_Office_scandal

[2] https://www.cio.com/article/3478068/counting-the-cost-of-cro...

>FAANG engineers have little impact on the org individually

Sounds like the "Responsibility will turn out to be so diffuse that no individuals will be found to be liable" excuse a few comments up. FAANG engineers are 100% responsible for memory corruption bugs that they introduce.

reply
ipython
20 days ago
[-]
One could argue the societal harm from social media could be directly linked to mass events such as https://www.wired.com/story/how-facebooks-rise-fueled-chaos-..., https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S00142..., and more.

The diffuse nature of the after effects of faang engineers actions make them harder to prosecute, but potentially much more devastating than even the tragedy of two airline crashes.

reply
thmsths
20 days ago
[-]
I don't necessarily disagree (although it is extremely hard to quantify the effects of small but widespread harm). But what I am saying is that the FAANG engineer is NOT responsible. The CEO is.
reply
sensanaty
20 days ago
[-]
You won't find me disagreeing with tossing Zucc in jail and losing the keys.
reply
madaxe_again
20 days ago
[-]
Yes. This is how you end up with a gunman waiting outside the Hilton.

When there is no justice, vigilantes and lynch mobs materialise.

reply
Seattle3503
20 days ago
[-]
As harsh as this sounds, it also seems to have other benefits. Often when things go wrong the solution the government comes up with is "micromanage the industry more", and the industry becomes yet more bureaucratic and compliance focused. Innovation is harder because the people making the rules aren't necessarily the domain experts.

I think an accountability approach lets engineers build for safety leveraging their expert knowledge, in contrast to a rule based approach which favors compliance and bureaucracy. Accountability will select for leaders with an understanding of good engineering and safety culture, rather than leaders who are good at bureaucracy and compliance.

I worked in the financial sector for a bit, where some leaders have personal accountability (eg chief compliance officer). I've seen questionable projects die because the company couldn't find someone to stay in that accountability role. The financial sector is not necessarily a good example of what I'm talking about generally, but in my particular experiences accountability seemed to work.

tl;dr: Fewer rules, more personal accountability.

reply
vanviegen
20 days ago
[-]
What does 'personal accountability' actually mean in your book? How is a person held accountable when their domain implodes due to incompetence or greed?
reply
Seattle3503
20 days ago
[-]
I mean personal criminal liability. Not civil or criminal liability absorbed by the larger corporation (though penalties to the corp might be necessary as well).

Patent law uses the concept of "a person having ordinary skill in the art" (PHOSITA) to determine which patents are novel and which are non-novel. The idea is that if an invention is obvious to a PHOSITA at the time of invention, the invention isn't novel or surprising. I think we could use the same concept in risk management.

If, at the time a decision is made, a PHOSITA would say a decision is likely to lead to serious harm, then someone in a leadership position should face criminal liability if that decision later does in fact lead to harm.

I think a) who should face the criminal liability, b) what we mean by "likely" c) what we mean by serious harm are all topics you could get into at length. But before you fiddle too much with the knobs on a, b, and c we would probably need to determine if criminal liability is the correct solution. I obviously think so.

reply
vanviegen
19 days ago
[-]
Sounds good. Sign me up! :-)
reply
JumpCrisscross
20 days ago
[-]
> People are dead because they thought that possibility of profit was worth the risk of hundreds of deaths

Probably untrue, to the point that Boeing may prefer the government do this instead of pursuing the company as a whole. The problem was nobody was connecting the cost cutting to outcomes.

reply
ruined
20 days ago
[-]
who's responsible for that connection? who's responsible for outcomes? executive power comes with executive responsibility
reply
ssivark
20 days ago
[-]
> The problem was nobody was connecting the cost cutting to outcomes.

If so, that sounds like (reckless) criminal negligence in the most charitable case and wilful disregard bordering malice in the worst case.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminal_negligence

reply
JumpCrisscross
20 days ago
[-]
> that sounds like (reckless) criminal negligence

Quite possibly.

reply
jajko
20 days ago
[-]
Anybody knowing anything about quality control in critical systems knows why its pursued at all costs, exactly due to such consequences - thats not even 101 of QC rather just first paragraph on first page.

Lets not make these into some clueless clowns, they knew darn well the risks and took them. Mass manslaughter would be a good start. Would be...

reply
JumpCrisscross
20 days ago
[-]
> anything about quality control in critical systems knows why its pursued at all costs

Nothing is pursued at all costs. Someone in a safety-critical function thinking they’re pursuing safety at all costs is incredibly dangerous because it suggests they don’t know the boundaries of their envelope.

reply
organsnyder
20 days ago
[-]
> The problem was nobody was connecting the cost cutting to outcomes.

That's negligence at best. This sort of high-level strategy is the vast majority of the job descriptions for senior leadership.

reply
zelon88
20 days ago
[-]
Criminal negligence that results in death is..... Get ready for this...

Negligent Homicide.

reply
plagiarist
20 days ago
[-]
It's neat that you can simply file paperwork and suddenly stealing wages from employees or negligent homicide of customers (and child labor employees) becomes a civil matter. Not a personal civil matter, of course.

Also sometimes you can shuffle all the profits to a different set of paperwork and have the old paperwork vanish along with its consequences. Very neat system.

reply
anonym29
20 days ago
[-]
Trying them for negligent manslaughter or homicide seems extreme, but I'd entertain an attempt at justifying that, and I'd do so in good faith and with an open mind to the arguments presented.

Just to be clear though, are you proposing that they should have these charges brought up against them and given the same rights to due process that everyone else gets, are you proposing something more akin to extrajudicial detention - a suspension of due process and the suspension of habeas corpus?

reply
egl2021
20 days ago
[-]
Why stop with the executives? Why not throw the shareholders into jail --- they approve the selection of the executives and benefit from whatever malfeasance you are targeting.
reply
brokencode
20 days ago
[-]
Most shareholders have no real say in the company, though it’s fair to investigate what the board knew and how they acted, as they serve on behalf of the shareholders.

I do think there needs to be legal culpability for anybody who was informed of risks and pushed on regardless. Though I can see where it would be very hard to prove anything.

It really is a tough problem here. I hope that somebody will be seriously punished for the deaths of hundreds, but I’m very doubtful.

reply
tjwebbnorfolk
20 days ago
[-]
If you have a 401k, you almost certainly are a Boeing shareholder.
reply
doctorpangloss
20 days ago
[-]
You can change the leadership to someone who is amenable to a quick concession as opposed to a drawn out legal fight. But can you destroy the desire for profit?
reply
danaris
20 days ago
[-]
It's not about destroying the desire for profit.

It's about recognizing that you can't, and putting safeguards in place to ensure that even with that desire—even when it's so overriding that in other circumstances we might classify it as a mental illness—the amount of harm that can do to people is strictly limited.

reply
bithive123
20 days ago
[-]
We can't destroy ignorance and violence but we don't just shrug and let the ignorant and violent run amok.
reply
mschuster91
20 days ago
[-]
> 1. Imprison executives who made the decisions that led to the result.

I'd go a step further. Follow the Truong My Lan case [1] - make these people actually fear getting executed.

I'm not a fan of the death penalty at all. It is disproportionately affecting the poor and otherwise disadvantaged. But for ultra rich people making money off of risking the death of others? Maybe that is what is needed to get rabid capitalism under control.

If the government keeps going on with not actually doing anything to the ultra rich until they steal from other ultra rich (SBF, Madoff), eventually people will take the law into their own hands otherwise. This United Health CEO will not have been the last, but "citizen justice" is not what anyone should want.

[1] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/vietnam-death-sentence-tycoon-t...

reply
saturn8601
20 days ago
[-]
So how do you suggest to implement this plan?

This country has been an oligopoly since its founding and apart from a few edge cases (FDR preventing the complete transition to socialism by placating the masses with the New Deal) the working class have never really had power.

reply
sirspacey
20 days ago
[-]
Then we should also jail the shareholders who profited and the activist shareholders who pushed for it

CEOs, especially of large companies, are glorified management

reply
christhecaribou
20 days ago
[-]
I downvoted then thought about it more and changed my mind.

It’s a fascinating idea to consider. If we could hold shareholders of companies like UnitedHealthCare or Boeing accountable for unethical behavior… it would sure stop fast.

reply
tjwebbnorfolk
20 days ago
[-]
This used to be the case with banks prior to the 1910s. If a bank became insolvent, the shareholders were personally liable for fixing it.
reply
perfectstorm
20 days ago
[-]
it will never happen. these company executives are major donors to politicians of both aisles. laws and regulations are for the common people like you and me. not for the ultra-rich. heck, even the judiciary is corrupt these days.
reply
inamberclad
20 days ago
[-]
Boeing should be put under financial oversight by the US government, the same way GM was in 2008.

It's apparent that the FAA's oversight powers are not strong enough to to overcome the financial pressures of management on their own.

For what it's worth, I work for a smaller aircraft manufacturer right now. Aerospace will always be a day late and a dollar short when profit is the focus instead of safety and sound design.

reply
mmooss
20 days ago
[-]
Was GM under financial oversight? I thought the US government financed and oversaw what was essentially a bankruptcy proceeding, with the loss-making and highly leveraged assets spun off and the rest consolidated in a 'new' GM. (or something like that)
reply
nradov
20 days ago
[-]
How would that work exactly? GM was in bankruptcy proceedings but Boeing is still a going concern. The federal government generally doesn't have statutory authority to impose financial oversight on companies.
reply
damiankennedy
20 days ago
[-]
How much can the US federal government fine a company like Boeing? 30 trillion would be nice. Or perhaps a federal level registration fee that covers safety/quality checks and costs 50 million per plane?
reply
nradov
20 days ago
[-]
Under which law could Boeing be fined $30T (an amount which greatly exceeds their enterprise value)? Please to provide a specific US Code citation.
reply
Nathanba
20 days ago
[-]
The judges could give them such large fines to force them into bankrupcy. Alex Jones was fined 1.1 billion dollars. How much should Boeing be fined for causing actual deaths?
reply
duxup
20 days ago
[-]
Most of the times the US is "involved" (by varying degrees) has involved serious financial issues / bankruptcy / some government agency's legitimate and legal involvement.

I don't know of any situation where "Boeing you're still solvent but we think you're being stupids." would be legal, or even desirable.

reply
BurningFrog
20 days ago
[-]
If Boeing doesn't go through a convincing change, I doubt they'll sell a lot of planes.

And that's fine. Bad companies get replaced by good ones. Life goes on.

reply
mitthrowaway2
20 days ago
[-]
For the people who are still alive, at least.

There's at least three problems with this laissez-faire ideal:

1) For some reason that is hard to understand, the prospect of Boeing's long-term decline does not necessarily translate into incentives for the people at the helm to steer it right. They can reap unfathomable rewards while guiding it to its doom. That's not only perverse and unjust, it's also bad for incentivizing success. This is not necessarily something specific to Boeing; any company is vulnerable to this disease.

2) It may be a contagious condition. When executives who ruined Boeing leave the company, they may take up influential positions at other companies, and have similar destructive effects. It's hard to understand how this can happen, but it's the sort of thing that does happen; that is a major problem that deserves to be solved.

3) A Darwinian process of creative destruction is fine if Boeing were sinking because it was improving but too slowly, and Airbus had improved even more and faster and surpassed it. If Canon replaces Kodak, life goes on and we get nice cameras. But in a case where Boeing dies not by being outgrown but by regressing, because 2024-Boeing has worse quality standards than 1994-Boeing, there's nothing fine about that; that's something that should concern anybody who cares about the production of high-quality airplanes. It's worth examining how we got here, and if an incentive disconnect at the executive level is responsible then there could be very valuable lessons to learn about corporate governance going forward.

reply
tomcar288
20 days ago
[-]
i'm no expert on this but i thought the military buys a bunch of stuff from them because there's no other choice, right? and all those airlines, their only other choice is airbus.

the industry simply doesnt compete enough, no?

reply
Jtsummers
20 days ago
[-]
Depends on the kind of aircraft, but there are other options. Cargo are often Boeing because they specialize in that kind of aircraft, and there are a fair number of aircraft that are modified off of Boeing base-aircraft (AWACS was built on the 707; KC-46 the cursed refueler program is built on the 767).

Fighters, bombers, and helicopters are more varied.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_active_United_States_m...

reply
NickC25
20 days ago
[-]
I think you're right - some of the hardware the military buys from Boeing is because legally they can't buy from anyone else. IIRC they are forced to buy American made stuff on national security grounds.

I don't have a problem with that, except that Boeing's products kinda suck.

reply
Jtsummers
20 days ago
[-]
There's a priority for US-based, but it's not a hard requirement. KC-46 was almost the KC-45, that was an NG/Airbus effort built on the A330.
reply
ViewTrick1002
20 days ago
[-]
Which has been a complete shitshow while the Airbus alternative keeps snagging up customers around the world.

> By January 2021, Boeing's losses on the program were estimated at $5 billion (~$5.55 billion in 2023).[88] At the time, it was expected that the KC-46 would not be combat ready until at least late 2023.[89]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_KC-46_Pegasus

reply
Jtsummers
20 days ago
[-]
Yep, why I wrote this in my other comment: KC-46 the cursed refueler program.

It's an excellent example of the self-inflicted wounds plaguing US DOD acquisition and sustainment programs.

reply
joe_the_user
20 days ago
[-]
Boeing's decisions were ultimately not a matter of the dubious leaders or the MD acquisition. They were a matter of the preferences of the owners, which is to say they expressed the preferences of Wall Street investors and the preferences are "provide a steady stream of revenues by cutting costs and gutting the company if necessary (subcontract nearly everything out, make the workforce disposable, etc)". You can see this in the decision of California's PG&E to give the money needed to maintain lines to their shareholder as a dividend. Overall, the process dispossesses the employees and mortgages the future of the enterprise.

To change this, you'd have to have a different source of funding for these enterprises at the least.

reply
adamc
20 days ago
[-]
Perhaps we need to rethink protecting shareholders from liability. I'm sure that would be unpopular, but having companies create harm for profit is a problem.
reply
hx8
20 days ago
[-]
Criminal liabilities? Something tells me that would cause a massive flight of capital from US stock exchanges.
reply
izacus
19 days ago
[-]
What's that "something"? The same shareholders which would be held accountable? Are those whispering to you? :)
reply
dylan604
20 days ago
[-]
> beginning to be worth less

the transition from worth less to worthless isn't very far. even in monospace fonts.

reply
hinkley
19 days ago
[-]
Make them move their headquarters back to Washington or North Carolina, so the team has to be around the engineering staff instead of insulated from them.

After the MD merger everyone knew it was bullshit they were moving to Chicago. The move to the DC area is equally bullshit.

reply
duxup
20 days ago
[-]
>O’Connor said the settlement’s provisions for choosing an independent monitor improperly required considering the race of the person appointed and minimized his role in the process.

How did considering the race of the person appointed even come up?

I can't imagine either side thinking there was some kind of advantage to doing so?

reply
Taters91
20 days ago
[-]
According to the NPR article about this: "The judge also objected to a requirement that the monitor selection process adhere to the DOJ's diversity and inclusion policy." So it seems as if the judge doesn't like something the DOJ routinely has, because the judge is saying the court should have a large part in deciding who the overseers are. The judge brought up DEI. Neither of the parties seem to have, besides what seems to be a standing policy. https://www.npr.org/2024/12/05/nx-s1-5217960/court-rejects-b... I agree with you, it would be very odd (even as someone who is generally pro DEI) to include it in this provision.
reply
duxup
20 days ago
[-]
That makes a lot more sense thanks.

Yeah I don't see a reason that just because the DOJ is a part of a legal deal ... somehow their department policies should be injected. Could have some very negative outcomes and strangeness about what kind of deal DOJ can even make if a department policy gets injected that counteracts something in the deal.

reply
rob74
20 days ago
[-]
> Reed Charles O'Connor (born June 1, 1965) is a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. He was nominated by President George W. Bush in 2007

Yeah, makes sense that he would interpret a reference to DEI as discriminatory. Maybe he wants to get noticed by the incoming administration for appointment to a higher court?

reply
ReptileMan
20 days ago
[-]
Good luck to him. It is nigh time to slay the DEI beast.
reply
Taters91
20 days ago
[-]
I can think of one reason, and it is that Boeing was accused of loosening hiring requirements because of their DEI policies. I do not believe this is the case for this ruling, and there is no evidence that Boeing changed hiring or training standards due to DEI policies.
reply
tomohawk
20 days ago
[-]
The Biden admin has been putting in DEI requirements on a number of legal settlements and contracts. For example, largs delays in CHIPs act rollout and EV charging station rollouts were caused by this. This is not routine, but extremely unusual and likely violates the US Constitution.
reply
LorenPechtel
20 days ago
[-]
Yeah. Both parties have become very used to backdooring things that can't come in through the front door. Hey, there's a reason they can't come in the front door!

The current DEI issue is simply one of many. The DEI focus is not routine, the overall problem is.

reply
lupusreal
20 days ago
[-]
Something something diverse viewpoints mumble mumble equity
reply
duxup
20 days ago
[-]
The concept that a given person's race or background makes them willing or even qualified to speak / address all people with similar background or race to me makes zero sense to me.
reply
nielsbot
20 days ago
[-]
If you mean that's what DEI is about, it's not.

Also, I'd say it's human nature to feel more comfortable and familiar with your "in group". Do you disagree?

reply
duxup
20 days ago
[-]
I don't know. My response was based on the other users response. I wasn't looking to sum up DEI or anything like that.
reply
nielsbot
19 days ago
[-]
Fair enough--that's why I asked the questions.
reply
nis0s
20 days ago
[-]
Boeing took a nose dive in standards and quality when they replaced people who understood engineering and product fundamentals with bottom-line focused MBAs. I hope Boeing serves as a cautionary tale for other companies, most others are not “too big to fail”.
reply
bigiain
20 days ago
[-]
It won't. The incentives are not aligned that way.

Whenever those MBAs in the C suite are judged by investor shareholders purely on financials, and they can pocket their own millions over short few-year timespans, they'll just juice the numbers to manipulate share prices and walk away from long term consequences.

I can't see this changing unless executive renumeration can somehow be tied to decades-long company performance. And ideally executive accountability can extend to real risks of jail sentences for poor decision well beyond when they jump ship.

reply
impish9208
20 days ago
[-]
reply