Season › 2025-26 › News 777 Partners and the purchase of Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft Mike Gaynes 02/11/2025 5comments | Jump to last The 777 Partners scandal has now hit the newspaper here in Seattle. Turns out Josh Wander purchased dozens of airliners, Boeing 737 MAX planes, as part of the purported wire fraud scheme he's been charged with by the FBI. (It's big news here because Boeing is Seattle-based.) Excerpts from the Seattle Times article, with some new details: Joshua Wander, co-founder of the investment firm 777 Partners, is widely known for his investments in European soccer teams, streaming platforms and aviation. His firm, which does not own any 777s or have any connection to Boeing's 777, invested in low-cost carriers Flair Airlines in Canada and Bonza Airlines in Australia, and signed deals with Boeing to purchase up to 134 MAX planes between 2021 and 2022. Wander's headline-grabbing spending spree quickly showed signs of cracking when, in 2023, some of Flair's airplanes were repossessed following allegations of missed payments. In October, federal prosecutors indicted Wander in New York on wire and securities fraud charges, accusing the businessman and his associates of lying to 777 Partners' investors and lenders to fraudulently obtain more than $500 million, according to recently unsealed court records. The Securities and Exchange Commission filed a separate civil suit against Wander, his business partners and their company this month. Federal prosecutors accused Wander of directing employees to alter financial records, including using Microsoft Paint to manipulate financial statements. The SEC accused Wander and 777 Partners of fraudulently soliciting investors to participate in a preferred equity offering, raising $237 million and then transferring some of those funds to personal bank accounts for Wander and his co-partner Stephen Pasko. According to court records, Wander fraudulently obtained $40 million in 2021 to pay for 777 Partners' expenses, including the purchase of 24 737 MAX 8 planes. Wander purchased the planes in March 2021 and owed Boeing about $10 million. But, around the same time, 777 Partners' profits dipped, due to rising interest rates and increased competition in its primary markets. To obtain more funding, Wander falsely claimed to one of 777 Partners' lenders that the company had assets it did not actually own, artificially increasing its borrowing base. Wander then used those fraudulently obtained funds to pay for the Boeing aircraft, according to court records. Wander did the same to another lender the same month, “to further finance the Boeing aircraft acquisition,” the documents read. In October 2021, he “impermissibly” used funds to cover millions of dollars of expenses associated with Flair Airlines. 777 Partners placed five orders for Boeing planes between March 2021 and July 2022, including one that Boeing celebrated with a signing ceremony at the Farnborough Air Show in 2022. Its order book had the option to purchase up to 134 737 MAXs, according to Boeing news releases, but only 38 of those turned into firm orders, according to Boeing's website tracking deliveries. Boeing delivered most of those 38 planes in 2021 and 2022, before 777 Partners stopped taking deliveries in the fall of 2022. The investment firm later resumed accepting deliveries and took possession of its final six MAX planes in 2023. It's not clear what happened to all those delivered planes. Bonza Airlines went bankrupt last year, abruptly grounding its fleet and leaving passengers stranded. Flair Airlines is still operating and is locked in legal battles with the aircraft lessors that repossessed its planes. 777 Partners went bankrupt in October 2024, and still owes its lenders hundreds of millions of dollars, according to the FBI. Ah, what fun we'd be having now if Moshiri's first preferred sale of the club had gone through. Reader Comments (5) Note: the following content is not moderated or vetted by the site owners at the time of submission. Comments are the responsibility of the poster. Disclaimer () Derek Knox 1 Posted 02/11/2025 at 16:56:07 Thanks Mike G, for the info and read of the article. It boils my piss when I hear of people saying Moshiri was a good man. That twat would have gladly sold us down the river dealing with 777 Partners as long as he got his back pocket filled. Fuck Moshiri and good riddance to 777 Partners... may Josh Wander be jailed for life! Kevin Molloy 2 Posted 02/11/2025 at 17:12:00 The very surprising thing about 777 Partners was all the money we got off them (£200M!). So much that I do wonder whether it was a cheap way to get money, insofar as did Moshiri and Wander cook this up together? "Look, this thing's gonna go pop; before it does, we will 'loan' you X if you pay Y into my offshore account." Mike Gaynes 3 Posted 02/11/2025 at 17:20:10 DK, I just can't wait to see where those missing planes turn up. Usmanov's driveway? Tony Abrahams 4 Posted 02/11/2025 at 17:32:52 I think Moshiri has ultimately used 777 Partners because it was their money (even though it definitely was not their fucking money!) that helped him to keep building the new stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock.Who knows what would have happened if they'd never kept giving him those loans?Isn't it a good job there is no such thing as clean money in this filthy world? Jerome Shields 5 Posted 02/11/2025 at 19:31:09 Actually, Josh Wander was going well until he came up against the great unwashed of the Everton fanbase. At times, ToffeeWeb seemed more like a financial forum than a football fan site. Add Your Comments In order to post a comment, you need to be logged in as a registered user of the site. » Log in now Or Sign up as a ToffeeWeb Member — it's free, takes just a few minutes and will allow you to post your comments on articles and Talking Points submissions across the site. How to get rid of these ads and support TW © ToffeeWeb