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Aerial drone company Insitu plans to lay off about 15% of its workforce, a cutback that will eliminate more than 200 jobs across the business – and likely well over 100 in the Columbia River Gorge.
Insitu, an aerial drone manufacturer in the Columbia River Gorge, will pay $25 million to settle allegations that its military drones were outfitted with used components rather than new parts.
Former Insitu CEO Ryan Hartman will raise his sights as the new CEO of World View, which is developing balloon-borne instrument platforms known as Stratollites. Toggle search box Toggle navigation.
The Justice Department says Boeing subsidiary Insitu will pay $25 million to settle claims that it used recycled parts rather than new parts in military drones.
Boeing drone unit Insitu, which employs about 1,000 people in the Columbia River Gorge and about 500 elsewhere, said Tuesday it is cutting its workforce due to competitive pressures and a falloff ...
Boeing (NYSE:BA) hired an adviser to sell its defense subsidiary Insitu, a maker of small, long-range military drones, Bloomberg News reported Monday, citing people familiar with the matter. The ...
Boeing's Washington state-based drone unit, Insitu, will pay $25 million to settle a DOJ case alleging fraud on U.S. military contracts. The whistleblower whom Boeing fired will get $4.6 million.
Insitu announced today the successful 24-hour flight of its Integrator unmanned aircraft. The flight demonstrated Integrator's expanded endurance at an increased gross take-off weight with payload on ...
Boeing drone unit Insitu, which employs about 1,000 people in the Columbia River Gorge and about 500 elsewhere, is cutting its workforce by about 15 percent due to competitive pressures ...