Boeing
crash payouts would be partly based on how long passengers knew they were
doomed
Settlements to the families of 346 people who died in the two catastrophic
Boeing Max plane crashes will be calculated, in part, by how long the victims
knew they were doomed.
Lawyers handling claims against the US aerospace company said the longer the
passengers and crew were aware of their desperate fate, the larger the likely
payout.
"There's a better chance of (financial) recovery if it took minutes rather
than seconds for the plane to crash,'' Joe Power, a personal-injury lawyer
representing some Ethiopian victims, told Bloomberg this weekend.
Lawyers handling claims against the US aerospace company said the longer the
passengers and crew were aware of their desperate fate, the larger the likely
payout.
The first passenger plane, Lion Air Flight 610, ditched into the Java Sea 12
minutes after taking off from Jakarta, Indonesia on October 29th last year.
Six months later on March 10th, Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashed six
minutes after take off from Addis Ababa.
In both cases, the jets were Max 8 models and in both cases, all aboard died.
Experts say the Boeing Company could be facing payouts in excess of $1 billion
(£770 million) if it can be proved that it had knowledge that the model had
safety flaws.
Thirty individual law suits have now been filed against Boeing on behalf of
families with many more expected.
"The bottom line is Boeing's exposure is much more substantial than in any
other case that I've been a part of in my quarter-century of representing
families'" in plane-crash cases, said Brian Alexander, a New York aviation
lawyer for victims of the Ethiopian Airlines jet .
"You get into 'What did you know and when did you know it.'"
The two disasters, with similar characteristics, led to the worldwide grounding
of all Boeing 737 Max 8 models.
Both pilots desperately struggled to take control of the aeroplanes as they
intermittently dived while reaching speeds of close to 600 miles per hour.
Investigators have zeroed in on the malfunctioning Maneuvering Characteristics
Augmentation System, an automated safety feature designed to prevent a stall.
Earlier this month Dennis Muilenburg, the Boeing CEO acknowledged its automatic
flight control system played a role in the two crashes.
"The full details of what happened in the two accidents will be issued by
the government authorities in the final reports, but, with the release of the
preliminary report of the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 accident investigation,
it's apparent that in both flights the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation
System, known as MCAS, activated in response to erroneous angle of attack
information."
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