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A British Airways passenger jet is shown after a fire at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas in September. Photograph: Steve Marcus/Reuters
A British Airways passenger jet is shown after a fire at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas in September. Photograph: Steve Marcus/Reuters

Passengers on British Airways jet that caught fire in Las Vegas sue Boeing

This article is more than 8 years old

Sixty-five passengers seek damages from Boeing and engine-maker GE for emotional stress and financial losses after 777 caught fire on airport runway

Passengers who were on a British Airways plane that caught fire while taking off from Las Vegas in September are suing the makers of the plane and its engines in Chicago, their lawyers said on Friday.

The engine of the Boeing 777 burst into flames, forcing all 170 passengers and crew to escape via emergency slides, after a part of a spool in the high-pressure compressor failed, according to findings from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).

Now 65 passengers from the US, Britain, Northern Ireland, Ireland and Germany are seeking damages from Boeing and engine maker GE for pain, suffering and emotional stress as well as financial losses, law firm Stewarts Law said in a statement.

James Healy-Pratt, head of aviation and travel law at Stewarts Law, told Reuters the lawsuit did not specify any amount but that if there ended up being 100 claimants, then $100m “would not be unthinkable”. He said previously US courts had been known to award in excess of $500,000 per passenger.

“Our clients are not critical of BA and feel that the pilots and cabin crew performed heroically in guiding the aircraft to an emergency stop, and then evacuating all occupants away from the burning aircraft in difficult circumstances,” Healy-Pratt said in a statement.

But Stewarts Law and the US-based the Wisner Law Firm say that at the time of the accident the Boeing aircraft, equipped with GE engines, was “defective and unreasonably dangerous in a number of important respects“.

A spokeswoman for Boeing in Germany said the company did not comment on legal litigation matters. A spokesman for GE in the US said GE could not comment on the lawsuit because it had not seen it yet.

“We are continuing to work with the NTSB to determine the root cause of the failure,” the spokesman added.

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