this post was submitted on 28 Mar 2024
566 points (98.5% liked)
Technology
59525 readers
3186 users here now
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Our Rules
- Follow the lemmy.world rules.
- Only tech related content.
- Be excellent to each another!
- Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
- Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
- Politics threads may be removed.
- No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
- Only approved bots from the list below, to ask if your bot can be added please contact us.
- Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
Approved Bots
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
FTA:
"By now you know what became of Swampy: He was found dead a few weeks ago with a gunshot wound to his right temple, “apparently” self-inflicted, on what was meant to be the third day of a three-day deposition in his whistleblower case against his former employer; his amended complaint, which his lawyer released last week, is the basis for much of this story.
It is worth noting here that Swampy’s former co-workers universally refuse to believe that their old colleague killed himself. One former co-worker who was terrified of speaking publicly went out of their way to tell me that they weren’t suicidal. “If I show up dead anytime soon, even if it’s a car accident or something, I’m a safe driver, please be on the lookout for foul play.”"
Hadn't the case been going around for years before that? It started in 2017.
It seems odd that it would happen now, when there is a bunch of press around it. Especially when someone conveniently dying would just make people assume foul play.
It was the right time to ensure the right stock price at the right time.
An enormous company like Boeing always has myriad legal things going on. There's always a little litigious jitter in their stock price.
Everything Swampy knew, the big cheeses did too and more. Statements entering the courts' records makes them more difficult to casually dismiss. Evidence of top echelon mismanagement becomes a problem, a stock price problem.
Being a bit cynical, him dying at this moment exactly means they are going to such lengths to protect that stock price. It may actually affect it positively.
Agreed. His family attributed it to the stress of dealing with the court case and the idea that people could die in one of the planes he oversaw being built. That tells me there was an underlying mental health issue that could explain this as suicide.
That said, the mental health decline came directly from the disregarding of his safety reports, so Boeing is at least partially responsible here. I don't think he was necessarily murdered in-person, but I do think he was essentially murdered by working in such a toxic workplace.
At least that's my take by straining at the few details I have access to.
No, they straight up mafia style murdered him. It's way too convenient.
Why wouldn't they have done that years ago before he had the chance to testify? He testified the previous week, so it's not like this prevented much...
Here's another source with more info:
So he had been suffering from PTSD and anxiety attacks since 2017, and at least as of 2019 that was still happening.
Also, this happened after the first round of testimony:
If someone was going to kill him, surely they would've done so before he testified, no? Or maybe back in 2019 when he talked to the NYT?
It should absolutely be investigated for foul play since he was involved in court proceedings, but I think there's a simpler, more reasonable explanation that his history of PTSD and anxiety attacks pushed him over the end on the day we was supposed to go in for a second round of questioning. Questioning by lawyers can be very intense, especially if you're already suffering from a mental condition.
Murder, and by extension getting away with it, costs money and even when it comes to covering up their mistakes corporations will not spend money until after it's absolutely necessary.
You're obviously entitled to your own interpretation of the limited data we have. I just think, given the three articles I've read, it's much more likely to be suicide than murder. However, I do hope they do a thorough investigation. Things I'm interested in knowing are:
But at this point, I'm thinking ~80% suicide, 20% murder.