A US judge rejected a criminal settlement with Boeing over the 737 MAX crashes on Thursday, slamming diversity policies at the aviation giant and the Justice Department that made him "skeptical ...
single-aisle plane. The Boeing 737 MAX Series was announced in 2011 and was introduced in May 2017. A Max 8 jet operated by Lion Air crashed in Indonesia in 2018, and an Ethiopian Airlines Max 8 ...
The aircraft (registered ET-AVJ) was just four months old, and the crash came just months after a previous tragedy involving another Boeing 737 MAX plane belonging to Lion Air that crashed in a ...
Boeing’s 737 MAX evolved to meet ... became its top-selling plane. WSJ’s Jason Bellini looks at how the grounding of the fleet following the Ethiopian Airlines crash could have a significant ...
More than 20 months after it was grounded following two deadly crashes ... of the grounded 737 Max aircraft after it failed to get approval last week for the plane's return to service from ...
A federal judge on Thursday rejected Boeing’s agreement to plead guilty to fraud in the wake of two fatal 737 MAX crashes ... The two plane crashes occurred in Indonesia and Ethiopia over ...
A judge rejected Boeing's plea deal with US prosecutors over 737 Max crashes. The deal involved Boeing pleading guilty to fraud and paying a $243.6 million fine. Boeing previously agreed to a $2.5 ...
after crashes of two 737 Max jetliners that killed 346 people, according to a court order issued Thursday. In his ruling, Judge Reed O'Connor took issue with both a lack of judicial oversight and ...
Photo shows A mans face close up and a women holds a poster with the faces of all those killed in a place crash The families of victims who were killed in two separate Boeing 737 MAX plane crashes ...
O’Connor’s decision means the fate of one of the longer-running legal battles over the aerospace giant’s responsibility for two 737 Max plane crashes that killed 346 people is still unresolved.
Judge Questions Guilty Plea: After objections from the families of the victims of the two 737 MAX plane crashes, a federal judge will rule whether to accept a plea agreement reached by the ...