News

THE Air India crash has resulted in the highest number of British deaths in a flight disaster since the 9/11 terror attacks. ...
Boeing (BA) soared into the Paris Air Show after a blockbuster May in which it secured 303 new aircraft orders and rolled out 38 737 MAX jets, finally reaching an FAA-capped production rate it has ...
So far in 2025, Boeing has delivered 220 aircraft: 164 737 MAXes, three 737 NGs for conversion into P-8s, 28 787s, 16 777s and nine 767s. European rival Airbus has delivered 243 aircraft so far ...
Boeing books 303 new orders, hits 737 MAX production target in blockbuster May. By Dan Catchpole. June 10, 2025 5:33 PM UTC Updated June 10, 2025 Item 1 of 3 A Boeing 737 MAX 8, the ...
The new deal means Boeing avoids a trial that was scheduled to start June 23 in connection ... red down pointing triangle will pay $1.1 billion to avoid prosecution for two crashes of its 737 MAX ...
Launching a new aircraft to replace the best-selling Boeing 737 Max isn’t an immediate priority, the aircraft manufacturer’s Chief Executive Officer Kelly Ortberg told the Financial Times in ...
Families of Boeing 737 MAX8 crash victims set to oppose the DOJ's decision to dismiss fraud charges, as Boeing agrees to a non-prosecution deal and financial settlement.
In the finale of The Rehearsal’s season 2, Fielder, who created, writes, and directs the HBO docuseries along with starring in it, successfully flew a commercial Boeing 737 plane. The feat, for which ...
Boeing will shell out more than $1 billion but avoided prosecution over two crashes involving its 737 Max planes that killed 346 people, the Justice Department said Friday ...
The US Department of Justice said Friday that it struck a deal with aircraft maker Boeing to avoid prosecution of the company over two fatal crashes of the 737 Max, a Friday court filing in the ...
The U.S. Justice Department said Friday that it has reached a deal with Boeing that will allow the aircraft maker to avoid prosecution over two crashes of its 737 Max planes that killed 346 people.