Lawsuit against Boeing over Lion Air crash demands Chicago jury
trial
Indonesia's National Transportation Safety
Committee (KNKT) sub-committee head for air accidents, Nurcahyo Utomo, holds a
model airplane while speaking during a news conference on its investigation into
a Lion Air plane crash last month, in Jakarta, Indonesia November 28, 2018.
REUTERS/Darren Whiteside
CHICAGO(Reuters) - The family of a man who
was killed when a Lion Air flight crashed in October has sued Boeing Co,
alleging the 737 MAX 8 aircraft was "unreasonably dangerous" and demanding a
jury trial in Chicago, where the U.S. manufacturer is based.
The lawsuit
was filed on Monday in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, on behalf of
the estate of Sudibyo Onggo Wardoyo, who died when Lion Air Flight 610 crashed
into the Java Sea after taking off from Jakarta on Oct. 29.
All 189
people on board the plane were killed.
The lawsuit alleges that the
two-month-old Boeing aircraft was unreasonably dangerous because its sensors
provided inaccurate data to its flight control system, causing its anti-stall
system to improperly engage.
It also alleges Boeing failed to provide
adequate instructions to pilots on how to respond to and disengage the plane's
anti-stall system.
"It was like Boeing first blindfolded and then tied
the hands of the pilots," said lawyer Thomas Demetrio of Corboy & Demetrio,
which is representing Onggo Wardoyo's estate on behalf of the victim's parents
and three siblings.
Boeing did not immediately return requests for
comment.
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