全球約有100架飛機卷入了這樁丑聞,如果不是如此聳人,這簡直太夸張了。在這起丑聞中,一家擁有假冒員工和美化為郵政信箱地址的可疑公司銷售和分銷假冒飛機零部件,這些零部件最終被安裝在世界上最大的幾家航空公司的飛機上。上周四晚上,美國航空公司(American Airlines)成為第四家,也是迄今為止最后一家在飛機上發(fā)現(xiàn)來自AOG Technics零部件的航空公司。今年9月初,美國西南航空公司(Southwest)成為首家宣布發(fā)現(xiàn)AOG Technics提供的未經(jīng)注冊的零部件的航空公司,從而揭開了全球各航空公司披露這些零部件的序幕。
美國航空公司在發(fā)給《財富》雜志的一份電子郵件聲明中稱,“在少數(shù)飛機上發(fā)現(xiàn)了未經(jīng)批準的零部件”,而西南航空公司則告訴《財富》雜志,它已發(fā)現(xiàn)一臺發(fā)動機包含兩個來自 AOG Technics 的零部件。
這一零部件丑聞是令航空業(yè)陷入困境的最新難題。由于全球公眾開啟“報復性旅行”(人們在經(jīng)歷了疫情時期的冬眠之后迫切希望出去走走),航空業(yè)已經(jīng)連續(xù)兩個夏天飽受航班不斷延誤和取消的困擾。美國航空公司和美國聯(lián)合航空公司(United Airlines)都不得不在談判新的飛行員工會合同的過程中小心翼翼,而且都取得了成功。在全球約25500架商用飛機的機隊中,有問題的零部件雖然只影響了小部分飛機,卻迅速造成了大量延誤。隨著AOG Technics的丑聞從美國一路蔓延到澳大利亞,世界各地的監(jiān)管機構、航空公司和零部件供應商都爭相追查可能存在的假冒零部件。
這家總部位于倫敦的神秘公司被指控偽造某些文件,并將可疑零部件運往世界各地的航空公司維修店。像AOG Technics這樣的公司是中間商,向航空公司簽約維修飛機的獨立公司提供零部件。這些有問題的零部件被用于維修由CFM國際公司(CFM International)生產(chǎn)的噴氣發(fā)動機[即用于維修空客(Airbus)和波音(Boeing)的舊型號發(fā)動機,CFM國際公司是通用電氣(GE)和法國賽峰集團(Safran)的合資企業(yè)]。CFM國際公司目前正在倫敦高等法院起訴AOG Technics,要求獲得能夠說明其欺詐程度的文件,以便追蹤所有假冒零部件。到目前為止,CFM國際公司認為AOG Technics可能已經(jīng)售出了數(shù)千個帶有偽造文件的零部件。
航空業(yè)咨詢公司R.W. Mann and Company總裁羅伯特·曼恩說,“零部件會配備全生命周期的紙質文件。”在航空業(yè),飛機上的每一個零部件都會被仔細追蹤,以確保其來源和質量都有據(jù)可查。單個故障部件可能會造成災難性的安全后果。
據(jù)路透社報道,發(fā)動機制造商CFM國際公司在6月意識到這些問題,當時一家葡萄牙維修店提醒CFM國際公司,稱發(fā)現(xiàn)帶有CFM名稱的偽造文件。到8月,英國民航局[UK’s Civil Aviation Authority,相當于美國聯(lián)邦航空管理局(Federal Aviation Administration)]發(fā)布了一份安全公告,宣布正在“調查”來自AOG Technics的“大量未經(jīng)批準的可疑零部件的供應情況”。鼓勵從AOG Technics購買任何零部件的航空公司和維修店核實零部件是否確實來自經(jīng)銷商聲稱的地方。
歐洲航空監(jiān)管機構——歐洲航空安全局(EASA)幾乎在同一時間發(fā)布了一份通知,證實某些文件是偽造的,會使人誤以為AOG Technics的零部件來自合法制造商。歐洲航空安全局在聲明中寫道:“在每個造假案例中,[批準放行證書]上標明的批準機構都證明該表格并非來自其組織內(nèi)部,而且證書是偽造的。”周四,美國聯(lián)邦航空管理局(FAA)成為最新一家發(fā)布關于AOG Technics偽造零部件計劃通知的監(jiān)管機構。
飛機零部件灰色市場中的“深度造假”公司
曼恩說:“雖然飛機零部件的灰色和黑色市場一直都存在,但大多數(shù)都是由不講信用的客戶購買的,但這是一個‘深度造假’公司偽裝成合法供應商欺騙了許多合法買家的案例?!?/p>
他告訴《財富》雜志,灰市產(chǎn)品通常是經(jīng)過認證或被認為可以維修的零部件,但因其不符合其他要求而報廢。相反,這些零部件“被廉價出售給需要廉價替代品的客戶”。黑市交易的性質可能更加惡劣,通常涉及向受國際制裁的國家出售軍事技術,例如向伊朗出售備用的F-14戰(zhàn)斗機。
曼恩還將部分責任歸咎于買家。他說:“同樣令人不安的是,本應能夠對供應商進行適當審查的成熟客戶卻上當受騙,這可能會危及客戶、員工和飛機的安全?!?/p>
截至上周,歐洲航空安全局表示,“迄今為止,還沒有關于未經(jīng)批準的可疑零部件導致問題的報告?!?/p>
我們對 AOG Technics 及其創(chuàng)始人了解多少?
根據(jù)英國的公開文件,AOG Technics由何塞·亞歷杭德羅·薩莫拉·伊拉拉于2015年創(chuàng)立。據(jù)彭博社報道,除了涉嫌偽造飛機零部件文件外,AOG Technics似乎還在領英(LinkedIn)上偽造了幾個自稱是公司高管的個人資料。該公司首席商務官鄺雷和執(zhí)行銷售代表約翰尼·里科的個人資料中有照片和工作經(jīng)歷,但這些都無法得到他們所謂的前雇主的證實。
對伊拉拉名下其他文件的進一步調查顯示,他在英國還創(chuàng)立了另外兩家公司:房地產(chǎn)公司Kensho Group LTD和電子商務供應商Sunwave Solutions。伊拉拉在Sunwave的商業(yè)伙伴里卡多·馬奎隆·切德勞伊告訴彭博社,該公司“在亞馬遜上銷售廚房電器,以在疫情期間消磨時間”。Kensho于2023年1月倒閉,而Sunwave似乎仍在運營——或者至少沒有申請解散。
伊拉拉的文件提供了一些關于以不尋常方式運營企業(yè)的見解。其中幾份文件錯字連篇,包括高管頭銜拼寫錯誤,以及奇怪的大寫單詞,似乎是有人按下了大寫鎖定鍵而不是“大寫首字母”鍵。其他文件顯示了一系列公司地址的變更,其中一些地址要么追溯到了倫敦的一處聯(lián)合辦公空間,要么追溯到西薩塞克斯郡寂靜小鎮(zhèn)上一位現(xiàn)已退休的會計師的辦公室。
2021年1月向英格蘭和威爾士公司注冊處提交的公司注冊證書顯示,Kensho的總部與AOG Technics在倫敦的地址相同——距離白金漢宮僅幾個街區(qū)的North Nova大廈。據(jù)彭博社報道,在這座金碧輝煌的高檔寫字樓里,AOG Technics以每月100美元的價格從聯(lián)合辦公空間The Argyll Club租用了一個“虛擬”地址。2021年4月,Kensho申請將地址更改為西薩塞克斯郡海沃茲希思鎮(zhèn)的一處住宅,該地址與Brian Cook Associates的地址相同(Brian Cook Associates是一家私人會計事務所,在原始公司注冊證書中被列為代理)。伊拉拉的電子商務公司Sunwave Solutions就是在西薩塞克斯郡的同一個地址注冊的。(布萊恩·庫克沒有回應置評請求。)
AOG Technics的網(wǎng)站和領英個人資料已無法激活,在谷歌上搜索該公司時,也被列為“永久關閉”。該公司沒有回應置評請求。伊拉拉和AOG的律師告訴路透社,他們正在全力配合英國民航局的調查。
哪些航空公司發(fā)現(xiàn)了假冒零部件?
西南航空公司是首家披露在其飛機上發(fā)現(xiàn)來自AOG Technics未經(jīng)批準的零部件的大型航空公司。該公司在8月份首次意識到這一問題,“并采取了必要措施,以確保我們的機隊中沒有任何來自AOG的零部件?!痹谖髂虾娇盏墓虒ζ淞悴考M行審查后,該公司從其中一架噴氣式飛機上拆除了兩個低壓渦輪葉片。
幾天后,維珍澳大利亞航空公司(Virgin Australia)也發(fā)現(xiàn)其飛機上使用了帶有偽造文件的渦輪葉片。在大洋洲和北美洲的航空公司都發(fā)現(xiàn)了來自歐洲供應商的零部件,這表明,航空業(yè)面臨的問題是全球性的,以及追查每一個可能涉嫌以虛假名義出售的零部件是多么困難。一周后,維珍澳大利亞航空公司發(fā)現(xiàn)了另一個不同的零部件,這次是渦輪噴嘴,被用在了另一架噴氣式飛機上。兩架飛機都被停飛,直到更換零部件。維珍澳大利亞航空公司的一位發(fā)言人表示,安全是公司的“重中之重”,公司采用了“高度嚴格的維護方法”來確保安全。
上周早些時候,美國聯(lián)合航空公司成為第三家披露在其飛機上發(fā)現(xiàn)AOG Technics假冒零部件的航空公司。該公司表示,在兩架美國聯(lián)合航空公司噴氣式飛機的發(fā)動機中發(fā)現(xiàn)了未經(jīng)注冊的零部件。這兩架飛機正在進行必要的維護,更換零部件后才能重新使用。美國聯(lián)合航空公司表示,將“根據(jù)供應商提供的新信息,繼續(xù)進行調查”。美國航空公司表示,它將“繼續(xù)與供應商和美國聯(lián)邦航空管理局合作,確保供應商不再提供這些零部件或不在飛機上使用這些零部件?!保ㄘ敻恢形木W(wǎng))
譯者:中慧言-王芳
全球約有100架飛機卷入了這樁丑聞,如果不是如此聳人,這簡直太夸張了。在這起丑聞中,一家擁有假冒員工和美化為郵政信箱地址的可疑公司銷售和分銷假冒飛機零部件,這些零部件最終被安裝在世界上最大的幾家航空公司的飛機上。上周四晚上,美國航空公司(American Airlines)成為第四家,也是迄今為止最后一家在飛機上發(fā)現(xiàn)來自AOG Technics零部件的航空公司。今年9月初,美國西南航空公司(Southwest)成為首家宣布發(fā)現(xiàn)AOG Technics提供的未經(jīng)注冊的零部件的航空公司,從而揭開了全球各航空公司披露這些零部件的序幕。
美國航空公司在發(fā)給《財富》雜志的一份電子郵件聲明中稱,“在少數(shù)飛機上發(fā)現(xiàn)了未經(jīng)批準的零部件”,而西南航空公司則告訴《財富》雜志,它已發(fā)現(xiàn)一臺發(fā)動機包含兩個來自 AOG Technics 的零部件。
這一零部件丑聞是令航空業(yè)陷入困境的最新難題。由于全球公眾開啟“報復性旅行”(人們在經(jīng)歷了疫情時期的冬眠之后迫切希望出去走走),航空業(yè)已經(jīng)連續(xù)兩個夏天飽受航班不斷延誤和取消的困擾。美國航空公司和美國聯(lián)合航空公司(United Airlines)都不得不在談判新的飛行員工會合同的過程中小心翼翼,而且都取得了成功。在全球約25500架商用飛機的機隊中,有問題的零部件雖然只影響了小部分飛機,卻迅速造成了大量延誤。隨著AOG Technics的丑聞從美國一路蔓延到澳大利亞,世界各地的監(jiān)管機構、航空公司和零部件供應商都爭相追查可能存在的假冒零部件。
這家總部位于倫敦的神秘公司被指控偽造某些文件,并將可疑零部件運往世界各地的航空公司維修店。像AOG Technics這樣的公司是中間商,向航空公司簽約維修飛機的獨立公司提供零部件。這些有問題的零部件被用于維修由CFM國際公司(CFM International)生產(chǎn)的噴氣發(fā)動機[即用于維修空客(Airbus)和波音(Boeing)的舊型號發(fā)動機,CFM國際公司是通用電氣(GE)和法國賽峰集團(Safran)的合資企業(yè)]。CFM國際公司目前正在倫敦高等法院起訴AOG Technics,要求獲得能夠說明其欺詐程度的文件,以便追蹤所有假冒零部件。到目前為止,CFM國際公司認為AOG Technics可能已經(jīng)售出了數(shù)千個帶有偽造文件的零部件。
航空業(yè)咨詢公司R.W. Mann and Company總裁羅伯特·曼恩說,“零部件會配備全生命周期的紙質文件。”在航空業(yè),飛機上的每一個零部件都會被仔細追蹤,以確保其來源和質量都有據(jù)可查。單個故障部件可能會造成災難性的安全后果。
據(jù)路透社報道,發(fā)動機制造商CFM國際公司在6月意識到這些問題,當時一家葡萄牙維修店提醒CFM國際公司,稱發(fā)現(xiàn)帶有CFM名稱的偽造文件。到8月,英國民航局[UK’s Civil Aviation Authority,相當于美國聯(lián)邦航空管理局(Federal Aviation Administration)]發(fā)布了一份安全公告,宣布正在“調查”來自AOG Technics的“大量未經(jīng)批準的可疑零部件的供應情況”。鼓勵從AOG Technics購買任何零部件的航空公司和維修店核實零部件是否確實來自經(jīng)銷商聲稱的地方。
歐洲航空監(jiān)管機構——歐洲航空安全局(EASA)幾乎在同一時間發(fā)布了一份通知,證實某些文件是偽造的,會使人誤以為AOG Technics的零部件來自合法制造商。歐洲航空安全局在聲明中寫道:“在每個造假案例中,[批準放行證書]上標明的批準機構都證明該表格并非來自其組織內(nèi)部,而且證書是偽造的?!敝芩?,美國聯(lián)邦航空管理局(FAA)成為最新一家發(fā)布關于AOG Technics偽造零部件計劃通知的監(jiān)管機構。
飛機零部件灰色市場中的“深度造假”公司
曼恩說:“雖然飛機零部件的灰色和黑色市場一直都存在,但大多數(shù)都是由不講信用的客戶購買的,但這是一個‘深度造假’公司偽裝成合法供應商欺騙了許多合法買家的案例?!?/p>
他告訴《財富》雜志,灰市產(chǎn)品通常是經(jīng)過認證或被認為可以維修的零部件,但因其不符合其他要求而報廢。相反,這些零部件“被廉價出售給需要廉價替代品的客戶”。黑市交易的性質可能更加惡劣,通常涉及向受國際制裁的國家出售軍事技術,例如向伊朗出售備用的F-14戰(zhàn)斗機。
曼恩還將部分責任歸咎于買家。他說:“同樣令人不安的是,本應能夠對供應商進行適當審查的成熟客戶卻上當受騙,這可能會危及客戶、員工和飛機的安全?!?/p>
截至上周,歐洲航空安全局表示,“迄今為止,還沒有關于未經(jīng)批準的可疑零部件導致問題的報告。”
我們對 AOG Technics 及其創(chuàng)始人了解多少?
根據(jù)英國的公開文件,AOG Technics由何塞·亞歷杭德羅·薩莫拉·伊拉拉于2015年創(chuàng)立。據(jù)彭博社報道,除了涉嫌偽造飛機零部件文件外,AOG Technics似乎還在領英(LinkedIn)上偽造了幾個自稱是公司高管的個人資料。該公司首席商務官鄺雷和執(zhí)行銷售代表約翰尼·里科的個人資料中有照片和工作經(jīng)歷,但這些都無法得到他們所謂的前雇主的證實。
對伊拉拉名下其他文件的進一步調查顯示,他在英國還創(chuàng)立了另外兩家公司:房地產(chǎn)公司Kensho Group LTD和電子商務供應商Sunwave Solutions。伊拉拉在Sunwave的商業(yè)伙伴里卡多·馬奎隆·切德勞伊告訴彭博社,該公司“在亞馬遜上銷售廚房電器,以在疫情期間消磨時間”。Kensho于2023年1月倒閉,而Sunwave似乎仍在運營——或者至少沒有申請解散。
伊拉拉的文件提供了一些關于以不尋常方式運營企業(yè)的見解。其中幾份文件錯字連篇,包括高管頭銜拼寫錯誤,以及奇怪的大寫單詞,似乎是有人按下了大寫鎖定鍵而不是“大寫首字母”鍵。其他文件顯示了一系列公司地址的變更,其中一些地址要么追溯到了倫敦的一處聯(lián)合辦公空間,要么追溯到西薩塞克斯郡寂靜小鎮(zhèn)上一位現(xiàn)已退休的會計師的辦公室。
2021年1月向英格蘭和威爾士公司注冊處提交的公司注冊證書顯示,Kensho的總部與AOG Technics在倫敦的地址相同——距離白金漢宮僅幾個街區(qū)的North Nova大廈。據(jù)彭博社報道,在這座金碧輝煌的高檔寫字樓里,AOG Technics以每月100美元的價格從聯(lián)合辦公空間The Argyll Club租用了一個“虛擬”地址。2021年4月,Kensho申請將地址更改為西薩塞克斯郡海沃茲希思鎮(zhèn)的一處住宅,該地址與Brian Cook Associates的地址相同(Brian Cook Associates是一家私人會計事務所,在原始公司注冊證書中被列為代理)。伊拉拉的電子商務公司Sunwave Solutions就是在西薩塞克斯郡的同一個地址注冊的。(布萊恩·庫克沒有回應置評請求。)
AOG Technics的網(wǎng)站和領英個人資料已無法激活,在谷歌上搜索該公司時,也被列為“永久關閉”。該公司沒有回應置評請求。伊拉拉和AOG的律師告訴路透社,他們正在全力配合英國民航局的調查。
哪些航空公司發(fā)現(xiàn)了假冒零部件?
西南航空公司是首家披露在其飛機上發(fā)現(xiàn)來自AOG Technics未經(jīng)批準的零部件的大型航空公司。該公司在8月份首次意識到這一問題,“并采取了必要措施,以確保我們的機隊中沒有任何來自AOG的零部件?!痹谖髂虾娇盏墓虒ζ淞悴考M行審查后,該公司從其中一架噴氣式飛機上拆除了兩個低壓渦輪葉片。
幾天后,維珍澳大利亞航空公司(Virgin Australia)也發(fā)現(xiàn)其飛機上使用了帶有偽造文件的渦輪葉片。在大洋洲和北美洲的航空公司都發(fā)現(xiàn)了來自歐洲供應商的零部件,這表明,航空業(yè)面臨的問題是全球性的,以及追查每一個可能涉嫌以虛假名義出售的零部件是多么困難。一周后,維珍澳大利亞航空公司發(fā)現(xiàn)了另一個不同的零部件,這次是渦輪噴嘴,被用在了另一架噴氣式飛機上。兩架飛機都被停飛,直到更換零部件。維珍澳大利亞航空公司的一位發(fā)言人表示,安全是公司的“重中之重”,公司采用了“高度嚴格的維護方法”來確保安全。
上周早些時候,美國聯(lián)合航空公司成為第三家披露在其飛機上發(fā)現(xiàn)AOG Technics假冒零部件的航空公司。該公司表示,在兩架美國聯(lián)合航空公司噴氣式飛機的發(fā)動機中發(fā)現(xiàn)了未經(jīng)注冊的零部件。這兩架飛機正在進行必要的維護,更換零部件后才能重新使用。美國聯(lián)合航空公司表示,將“根據(jù)供應商提供的新信息,繼續(xù)進行調查”。美國航空公司表示,它將“繼續(xù)與供應商和美國聯(lián)邦航空管理局合作,確保供應商不再提供這些零部件或不在飛機上使用這些零部件?!保ㄘ敻恢形木W(wǎng))
譯者:中慧言-王芳
About 100 planes around the world have been caught up in a scandal that would be cartoonish if it weren’t so terrifying. It saw a dubious company, with fake employees and an address that was a glorified PO box, sell and distribute fake airplane parts that ended up in planes belonging to some of the world’s biggest airlines. On Thursday night, American Airlines became the fourth, and so far final, airline to have found parts from AOG Technics in its aircraft. Southwest kicked off the disclosures from various airlines around the world in early September, when it became the first to announce it had located an unregistered part from AOG Technics.
American Airlines “identified the uncertified components on a small number of aircraft,” according to an emailed statement to Fortune, while Southwest told Fortune it had identified one engine that contained two parts from AOG Technics.
The parts scandal comes as the latest development in a series of difficulties that have embroiled the airline industry. It has had two consecutive summers plagued with seemingly constant flight delays and cancellations as “revenge travel” grips a worldwide public eager to get out after a pandemic-era hibernation. American Airlines and United both had to navigate the high-wire act of negotiating new pilots union contracts—and both did so successfully. But the prospect of faulty parts, albeit affecting a small fraction of the world’s fleet of roughly 25,500 commercial aircraft, is swiftly piling up delays. Regulators, airlines, and parts suppliers around the world are scrambling to track down possible bogus parts as the AOG Technics scandal spreads from the U.S. all the way to Australia.
The mysterious London-based firm stands accused of falsifying certain documents and shipping the suspect parts to airline repair shops around the world. Companies like AOG Technics are middlemen that supply parts to independent firms that airlines contract to do repairs on their planes. The parts in question were used to repair jet engines made by CFM International, a joint venture between GE and the French firm Safran, used in older models of Airbus and Boeing engines. CFM is now suing AOG Technics in London’s High Court to get access to documents that would illustrate the extent of its fraud, so that all the bogus parts can be tracked down. So far, CFM believes AOG Technics may have sold thousands of parts with fraudulent documentation.
“Parts are accompanied by a lifetime of paperwork,” said Robert Mann, president of the airline industry consulting firm R.W. Mann and Company. In the aviation industry, every part of a plane is carefully tracked to ensure its provenance and quality are accounted for. A single faulty part could have catastrophic safety consequences.
CFM, the engine manufacturer, became aware of the issues in June when a Portuguese repair shop alerted it to the existence of allegedly forged documents bearing its name, according to Reuters. By August, the UK’s Civil Aviation Authority (the country’s equivalent of the Federal Aviation Administration) had released a safety notice announcing it was “investigating the supply of a large number of Suspect Unapproved Parts” originating from AOG Technics. Airlines and maintenance shops that had purchased any parts from AOG Technics were encouraged to verify whether they had actually come from where the distributor claimed they did.
Europe’s aviation regulator, the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), released a notice around the same time confirming that certain documents had been forged to make it appear as if AOG Technics’ parts had come from legitimate manufacturers. “In each confirmed example, the approved organization, identified on the [Authorized Release Certificate], has attested that the form did not originate from within their organization, and the certificate has been falsified,” the EASA’s statement read. On Thursday the FAA became the latest regulator to issue a notice about AOG Technics’ bogus parts scheme.
A “deep fake” company in the gray market of airplane parts
“While there have always been gray and black markets in aircraft parts, mostly purchased by questionable customers, this is a case of a “deep fake” company masquerading as a legitimate supplier that deceived many legitimate buyers,” Mann said.
He told Fortune that gray market products are often component’s that are either certified or deemed repairable but don’t meet some other requirement and should therefore be scrapped. Instead these parts “get sold cheaply to customers who need inexpensive replacements.” Black market dealings can be slightly more nefarious in nature, often entailing sale of military technology to countries that are under international sanctions, such as selling spare F-14 fighter jets to Iran.
Mann also laid some portion of the blame at the buyers’ feet. “It is also disturbing that sophisticated customers who should have been able to properly vet the supplier were nonetheless duped, potentially placing safety of customers, employees, and aircraft at risk,” he said.
As of last week the EASA said “to date there have been no reports of problems resulting from the suspect unapproved parts.”
What do we know about AOG Technics and its founder?
AOG Technics was founded by Jose Alejandro Zamora Yrala in 2015, according to public filings in the UK. In addition to allegedly forging documents for airplane parts it appears that AOG Technics created several fake LinkedIn profiles claiming to be company executives, according to Bloomberg. The profiles listed for its chief commercial officer Ray Kwong and an executive sales representative Johnny Rico featured stock photos and employment histories that couldn’t be verified by any of their purported former employers.
A further look into other filings under Yrala’s name show he founded two other companies in the UK: real estate company Kensho Group LTD and ecom vendor Sunwave Solutions. Yrala’s business partner at Sunwave Ricardo Maquilon Chedrauy told Bloomberg the company sold kitchen appliances “on Amazon to kill time during the pandemic.” Kensho folded in January 2023 and Sunwave appears to still be operational—or at least hasn’t filed for dissolution.
Yrala’s filings offer some insight into businesses that were run in an unusual fashion. Several of the filings are riddled with typos, including misspelled executive titles and oddly capitalized words that appear to have happened when someone hit caps lock instead of the “A” key. Other documents show a series of shifting corporate addresses, some of which end up back at either a coworking space in London and the offices of a now-retired accountant in a sleepy West Sussex town.
A Certificate of Incorporation filed with the Registrar of Companies for England and Wales in January 2021 listed Kensho’s headquarters at the same London address of AOG Technics—the North Nova building just a few blocks from Buckingham Palace. Within the upscale, gleaming office tower AOG Technics rented a “virtual” address from coworking space The Argyll Club for $100 a month, according to Bloomberg. In April 2021, Kensho requested an address change to a residence in Haywards Heath, West Sussex that is the same address of Brian Cook Associates, a private accounting practice listed as an agent in the original certificate of incorporation. That same West Sussex address was used to incorporate Yrala’s ecom company Sunwave Solutions. (Brian Cook did not respond to a request for comment.)
AOG Technics’ website and LinkedIn profile are no longer active and a Google search for the company lists it as “permanently closed.” The company did not respond to a request for comment. Lawyers for Yrala and AOG told Reuters they are cooperating fully with an investigation opened by the CAA.
What airlines have found fake parts?
Southwest Airlines was the first major airline to disclose that it had found uncertified parts that originated from AOG Technics in its aircraft. It first became aware of the problem in August “and took necessary steps to ensure we do not have any parts in our fleet from AOG,” the company said. After Southwest’s suppliers conducted a review of its parts the company removed two low pressure turbine blades from one of its jets.
A few days later, Virgin Australia also found a turbine blade with forged documents had been used in its planes. The fact parts from a European supplier were found in airlines in Oceania and North America illustrated just how global an issue the industry was facing and how difficult it would be to track down every individual part that may have been allegedly sold under false pretenses. A week later Virgin Australia discovered another, different part, this time a turbine nozzle, had been used in a second jet. Both planes were grounded until replacements could be installed. A spokesperson for Virgin Australia said safety is the company’s “highest priority” and it applies a “highly stringent approach to maintenance” to ensure it is upheld.
Earlier this week, United became the third airline to disclose it had identified AOG Technics’ bogus parts in its airplanes. Two United jets were found to have had unregistered parts in their engines, the company said. Both planes are undergoing the requisite maintenance to replace the part before being used again. United will “continue to investigate as new information becomes available from our suppliers,” the company said. American Airlines said it would “continue working” with suppliers and the FAA “to ensure these parts are no longer in our supply or otherwise in use on our aircraft.”