Helicopter
company involved in Kobe Bryant crash hit with 2 new lawsuits
Two more families who lost loved ones have sued the helicopter company
responsible for the January crash that killed Kobe Bryant and eight others.
The basketball star's widow, Gianna Bryant, filed a similar wrongful death
lawsuit in February.
The helicopter was flying in dense fog when it crashed into a hillside
northwest of Los Angeles, investigators have said. Their final report is still
in the works.
Two more wrongful death lawsuits were filed Monday against the helicopter
company carrying Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna, and eight others that
crashed in January, killing everyone on board.
The new suits - filed in Los Angeles by surviving family members on behalf of
passengers Christina Mauser, and Alyssa, John, and Keri Altobelli - echo many
of the claims Gianna Bryant, the basketball star's widow, made in her February
lawsuit against the operator. The two families are represented by the same
attorney, and their complaints are very similar.
They claim the helicopter operator Island
Express and its holding company "negligently and
carelessly breached their duty to own, lease, manage, maintain, control,
entrust, charter, and operate the Subject Helicopter in a reasonable
manner," according to court documents.
Island Express, which in January suspended all flights following the crash, did
not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Federal investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board said in a
their preliminary report in February that the wreckage exhibited no signs of an
engine failure when it impacted a hillside northwest of Los Angeles at about
184 miles per hour amidst dense fog.
"Our investigators have already developed a substantial amount of evidence
about the circumstances of this tragic crash," Robert Sumwalt, chair of
the NTSB, said in a press release in February. "And we are confident that
we will be able to determine its cause as well as any factors that contributed
to it so we can make safety recommendations to prevent accidents like this from
occurring again."
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