Severed Wiring, "Suspicious Washer" Found On Two H-47s
ANN REALTIME UPDATE
05.15.08 1420 EDT: Vandalism. That is the assessment by
officials with the Department of Defense of damage found on two
H-47 Chinook helicopters on the production line at Boeing's plant
in Ridley Park, PA.
The Associated Press reports DoD personnel confirmed wiring was
cut on two helicopters. Tuesday's discovery of the damage shut the
plant down.
"We have determined that this was a deliberate act and not an
accident," said Ken Maupin, resident agent in charge of the
Philadelphia area office of the Defense Criminal Investigative
Service.
Work has since resumed at the plant, with federal officials
passing out fliers offering a $5,000 reward for information
regarding the incidents.
ANN will update this story as more information becomes
available.
Original Report
1315 EDT: Is it accidental damage... or
sabotage? Department of Defense officials are working to determine
the nature of damage to two H-47 Chinook helicopters on the
production line at Boeing's plant in Ridley Park, PA.

The Associated Press reports employees discovered severed wiring
on one Chinook during a quality control inspection Tuesday, and a
second with a "suspicious washer." Both helos were part of an
eight-ship tranche being prepared for delivery to the US Army.
Production came to halt as workers scrambled to determine the
reason for the suspect damage.
"Boeing production employees found the irregularities in 2
Chinooks on line and immediately notified management in accordance
with standard procedures," the company said in a terse statement
released Tuesday. "Boeing will continue to follow these processes
rigorously so that the company completes and delivers flawless
aircraft to its customers."
Production has since resumed at Ridley Park... under the
watchful eye of investigators with the Defense Criminal
Investigative Service (DCIS), a branch of the DoD. The Federal
Bureau of Investigations is also involved.
"They have looked at
six of the other aircraft they appear to be ok, but we'll know by
tomorrow what may have caused the damage," Congressman Joseph
Sestak (D-PA) told WPVI-6. "At the same time Boeing security force
has been collaborating with them to try to investigate why this
occurred. No one knows yet whether this is some unusual occurrence
that just happened by accident or there is something of more
concern."
No one at Ridley Park was willing to talk with reporters
Wednesday. Members of Union 1069 refused to comment on the matter,
and Boeing provided few details.
"Boeing will continue to cooperate with the Defense Contract
Management Agency to close this incident," the company said
Thursday. "Boeing Rotorcraft Systems employees have worked to
resolve the issues as quickly and efficiently as possible. Boeing
remains committed to delivering products that meet or exceed
stringent quality standards and operational requirements to the men
and women of the US Armed Forces and its allies."
Boeing is currently modernizing the Army's fleet of CH-47
Chinooks. In addition to use by several allied governments, the
venerable twin-rotor aircraft are the workhorse vertical lift
transports for the Army, Marines, and Special Forces operating in
Iraq and Afghanistan.