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Timeline: Key events in the troubled history of the Boeing 737 Max jetliner

The Associated Press
September 03, 2025

Airlines have flown Boeing's 737 Max jets for just eight years, but in that short time two of them crashed, killing 346 people.

The Max was marketed as a more fuel-efficient version of the American aerospace company's popular 737, the best-selling airliner ever, but it quickly become a symbol of safety concerns swirling around Boeing.

Regulators around the world grounded all Max jets in March 2019 after the second crash, which led to the ousting of Boeing's CEO. That was followed by his successor stepping down last summer after the Federal Aviation Administration grounded a particular model of the Max when a panel covering an unused emergency exit blew off an Alaska Airlines Max in flight.

The blowout led to government investigations, including a criminal probe by the Justice Department. Here is a timeline of key events in the history of the Max:

August 2011: Boeing announces the Max, a 737 with larger engines, instead of designing a new plane to compete with the A320neo from rival Airbus.

August 2015: The first 737 Max plane rolls off the production line.

January 2016: The 737 Max takes its first test flight.

March 2017: Federal Aviation Administration certifies the 737 Max 8. It approves a larger version, the 737 Max 9, 11 months later.

May 2017: Malindo Air, a Malaysian subsidiary of Indonesian budget airline Lion Air, is the first to receive a 737 Max.

May 2017: The Max makes its first commercial flight on May 22 from Malaysia's capital of Kuala Lumpur to Singapore.

September 2018: By the end of the month, Boeing has received orders for nearly 5,000 Max jets.

Oct. 29, 2018: Lion Air Flight 610, a Boeing 737 Max 8, plunges into the Java Sea off the coast of Indonesia minutes after takeoff from Jakarta, killing all 189 people on board.

November 2018: Attention focuses on a new Boeing flight-control system called MCAS that Boeing did not disclose to pilots and airlines. Indonesian investigators say the Flight 610 pilots struggled for control as the automated system pushed the nose of the plane down more than two dozen times.

March 10, 2019: Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, a Boeing 737 Max 8, crashes after takeoff from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, killing 157 passengers and crew members.

March 2019: Within days of the second crash, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and regulators in nations around the world order the grounding of all 737 Max jets.

April 2019: A preliminary report by Ethiopian officials shows similarities to the Indonesia crash. The report indicates Flight 302 pilots tried to follow Boeing instructions for an MCAS malfunction but couldn't level the nose manually because of the plane's high speed.

May 2019: Boeing discloses a safety alert to warn pilots about bad readings from a key sensor on the Max did not work, but the company did not tell airlines or FAA about the problem until after the first Max crash.

Dec. 23, 2019: Boeing ousts CEO Dennis Muilenburg, who was seen as pressuring the FAA to lift the Max grounding order.

Jan. 13, 2020: David Calhoun, the chairman of Boeing's board, takes over as CEO and says he sees "opportunities to be better, much better."

Nov. 18, 2020: FAA announces its approval of a flight-control software update and other changes by Boeing, clearing the way for airlines to resume flying 737 Max jets.

Dec. 29, 2020: Commercial flights of the 737 Max resume in the U.S.

Jan. 7, 2021: The Justice Department charges Boeing with conspiracy to defraud the U.S. but says it won't prosecute the company for misleading regulators about the 737 Max if it pays a $2.5 billion settlement and tightens protections against violating fraud laws for three years.

March 23, 2022: A jury in Texas finds Boeing's chief technical pilot for the 737 Max not guilty on four counts of wire fraud for allegedly misleading regulators about MCAS.

Sept. 22, 2022: Boeing agrees to pay $200 million and former CEO Muilenburg agrees to pay $1 million to settle Securities and Exchange Commission charges that they misled investors by saying one month after the Lion Air crash the 737 Max was "as safe as any airplane that has ever flown the skies," even though the company had determined MCAS posed a safety risk in need of repair.

Oct. 22, 2022: A federal judge in Texas rules the Justice Department violated the rights of relatives of the Indonesia and Ethiopia crash victims by not consulting them before approving the deal with Boeing. The families want the settlement nullified.

Feb. 9, 2023: Judge Reed O'Connor rules that despite "Boeing's egregious criminal conduct," federal law doesn't allow him to overturn the settlement.

Dec. 28, 2023: FAA says it is monitoring inspections of 737 Max jets after Boeing asks airlines to look for a potential loose bolt in the rudder-control system.

Jan. 5, 2024: A panel covering an unused emergency exit blows off a 737 Max 9 during an Alaska Airlines flight. Pilots land the plane safely.

Jan. 6, 2024: FAA grounds all 737 Max 9s in the U.S. Less than three weeks later, the agency clears airlines to resume flights once they have completed mandatory inspections of their fleets' door plugs.

Feb. 6, 2024: Investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board say four bolts that help secure door plugs to Max 9s were missing from the Alaska jet after repair work at a Boeing factory.

Feb. 26, 2024: A panel of outside experts, convened after the two deadly crashes, reports Boeing's safety culture falls short despite the company's efforts to fix it.

Feb. 28, 2024: FAA gives Boeing 90 days to write a plan to improve manufacturing quality and safety. Boeing delivers the report in late May.

March 4, 2024: FAA says an audit of 737 Max manufacturing at Boeing and key supplier Spirit AeroSystems turned up "multiple instances" of failing to make sure quality standards were met.

March 19, 2024: FBI informs passengers on the Alaska Airlines flight they might be victims of a crime.

March 25, 2024: Calhoun says he will step down as CEO by year-end. Two others officials leave in a management shakeup.

May 14, 2024: Justice Department tells Judge O'Connor that Boeing violated terms of the 2021 settlement related to the 737 Max crashes.

June 13, 2024: FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker says his agency's oversight of Boeing was "too hands-off" before the door-plug blowout, adding that the FAA is now "more active."

June 18, 2024: Calhoun appears at a Senate hearing for questioning. Some senators tell him they think Boeing deserves to face prosecution.

July 7, 2024: The Justice Department says Boeing agrees to plead guilty to conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government for misleading regulators who approved pilot-training standards for the Max.

July 31, 2024: Boeing's board of directors names company outsider Kelly Ortberg, an aerospace veteran, as the next CEO.

Aug. 6, 2024: The National Transportation Safety Board releases interviews with Boeing factory workers who said they were pressured to work too fast and asked to perform jobs that they weren't qualified for.

Sept. 13, 2024: A strike by Boeing factory workers in Washington state stops production of the 737 Max, 777 jets and 767 cargo planes. The strike would not end for more than seven weeks.

Oct. 11, 2024: Lawyers for families of some crash victims ask Judge O'Connor to throw out Boeing's plea deal and put the company on trial. They accuse Boeing and the Justice Department of airbrushing facts and ignoring that 346 people died in the crashes.

Dec. 5, 2024: O'Connor rejects the plea agreement, citing concern that diversity policies of both the government and Boeing could influence the selection of an independent compliance monitor. The judge tells the two sides to report back on how they plan to proceed.

March 25, 2025: After granting multiple extensions, O'Connor sets a June 23 trial date for the criminal case.

May 23, 2025: The Justice Department says further negotiations resulted in an agreement under which Boeing would pay or invest more than $1.1 billion in exchange for prosecutors moving to dismiss the conspiracy charge.

June 24, 2025: The NTSB finds that lapses in Boeing's manufacturing and safety oversight, combined with ineffective inspections and audits by the FAA, led to a 737 Max leaving a factory without bolts in place for the panel that later flew off during an Alaska Airlines flight. The board's chairperson says the crew's heroic actions ensured everyone on board survived.

Sept. 3, 2025: O'Connor holds a hearing on the U.S. government's motion to dismiss the conspiracy charge against Boeing. The judge invites relatives of the crash victims to speak during the hearing. He says he will issue a decision at a later date.

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