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Lawsuit claims Uber could have stopped driver prior to 2016 Kalamazoo shooting rampage

Matt Mellen claims he tried to contact Uber to deactivate Jason Dalton but didn't receive a response until it was too late.

KALAMAZOO, Mich. — A man is claiming he was in the passenger's seat during a dangerous Uber ride with Jason Dalton just hours prior to the Kalamazoo shooting rampage. 

Matt Mellen said in a lawsuit against Uber that he tried to contact the company using their 24/7 incident response team to investigate Dalton. The lawsuit also claims he dialed 911. 

"Defendants Uber did absolutely nothing," the lawsuit claims, "Still active on Uber’s app, Dalton continued his Uber rides, killing six, wounding many, deeply damaging Matt Mellen, for life."

In 2019, Dalton was sentenced to life in prison with no chance for parole. The victims include a father and son, and four women out for a fun evening. 

Mellen's lawsuit, filed Sept. 10 by attorneys Matthew Cooper and Frank Melchiore, claims Dalton was his Uber driver the night of Feb. 20, 2016. Inside the car, Dalton began driving in a "deadly, dangerous manner certain to cause injury, death, damage." Mellen claims Dalton was speeding, running red lights, and even "smashed into" another vehicle. 

RELATED: Woman who shielded 6 children in Kalamazoo shooting nominated for award by Michigan congressman

"Matt Mellen knew he had to do something," the lawsuit reads, "The surreal became reality. Should he punch this Uber driver in the head? Should he pull the wheel, and get this Uber car to go into a ditch…crash it into a building… stop this madness?"

During an interview with Good Morning America in 2016, Mellen said Dalton was "kind of driving through the medians, driving through the lawn speeding along. Finally, once he came to a stop, I jumped out of the car and ran away." 

Eventually, the lawsuit claims Mellen escaped the "kidnapping, the physical confinement of the Uber driver's crimes," by rolling out of the car. 

Mellen then proceeded to call 911, and tried to call, connect and reach Uber to report Dalton. Mellen could not reach the company. The lawsuit claims Uber boasts a 24/7 incident response team. 

"And yet, defendant Dalton continued in his capacity as an Uber driver and responded to a request for transportation," claims the lawsuit, "Which took him to the Meadows apartment complex on the eastern edge of Kalamazoo County, where Tiana Carruthers was shot four times by Uber driver Dalton."

Uber's attorneys did not respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit. 

Mellen is seeking a jury trial and more than $25,000, plus attorney fees. Mellen's lawsuit claims he is "severely traumatized, suffering post-traumatic stress disorder, severe survivor's guilt, and additional afflictions."

RELATED VIDEO: Family of Kalamazoo Uber shootings victims reflect on loss 5 years later

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