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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Feds arrest 36 in drug raid at Pennsylvania Boeing plant

Patrick Walters Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Federal agents raided a Boeing plant that makes military helicopters in suburban Philadelphia on Thursday and charged more than three dozen people with distributing or trying to get prescription drugs, among them powerful painkillers. The arrests were made by the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration at the 5,400-employee plant in Ridley Park, where workers build aircraft including the H-47 Chinook helicopter and the V-22 Osprey. The plant, part of Boeing’s Defense, Space and Security unit, is also the headquarters for its Rotorcraft division. It did not appear to be an organized drug ring, but rather a “nebulous” series of independent actors, authorities said. “These sales placed the individual abusers, as well as society at large, at risk,” said DEA agent Vito S. Guarino. All but one of the 37 people charged were current or former Boeing employees, U.S. Attorney Zane Memeger said at a news conference. He did not know what kind of jobs they had and said he wasn’t aware of any accidents or problems involving aircraft made by the suspects. Indictments were unsealed charging 23 people with illegal distribution of a prescription drug, federal prosecutors said. In addition, 14 others were charged with attempted possession of the various drugs — including the painkillers fentanyl, oxycodone and others — allegedly being sold by their co-workers. Prosecutors said all but one of those charged had been arrested, but they declined to comment on the status of the 37th. Boeing informed authorities of their suspicions about drug activity on the property after an internal investigation, company spokesman Damien Mills said in a prepared statement. “Boeing commends the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and other federal law enforcement agencies for their rigorous and thorough investigation, throughout which we took appropriate steps to ensure safety of our employees and the absolute integrity and quality of the products we produce for our customers,” the statement read. Employees are tested if they’re suspected of being under the influence of drugs or alcohol, the statement said. A man who answered the telephone at the union for workers at the plant declined to comment. A message left for a spokeswoman for the Department of Defense was not immediately returned. Prosecutors said they don’t think there was any connection between the drug arrests and a 2008 error at the plant. In November that year, Boeing temporarily shut down two production lines that make the Chinook and Osprey after a plastic cap was found in the fuel line of an in-production Osprey. Boeing later submitted a corrective action plan and restarted production. In May that year, the factory was shut down when a disgruntled employee used his work-issued wire cutters to sever about 70 electrical wires in a nearly finished Chinook. That employee, Matthew Montgomery, of Trevose, pleaded guilty to destroying property under contract to the government. Authorities said he was upset about a job transfer.
Associated Press writer Randy Pennell contributed to this report.