Family to sue Boeing and Ethiopian Airlines over 737 MAX crash

Samya Stumo, who died in the Ethiopian Airlines flight ET 302 plane crash and whose family has filed a lawsuit in the matter. Picture: STUMO FAMILY VIA REUTERS
Samya Stumo, who died in the Ethiopian Airlines flight ET 302 plane crash and whose family has filed a lawsuit in the matter. Picture: STUMO FAMILY VIA REUTERS

The family of an American woman killed in the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX filed a lawsuit on Thursday against the airline, Boeing  and Rosemount Aerospace, the manufacturer of a part of the aircraft that is the focus of investigators.

The complaint was filed in US federal court in Chicago by the parents of Samya Stumo, who, lawyers said, was on a work trip when Ethiopian Airlines flight 302 crashed on March 10 soon after taking off from Addis Ababa, killing all 157 on board.

It is the first lawsuit filed on behalf of a US victim of the Ethiopian disaster and the first to target the airline and parts manufacturer Rosemount, in addition to Boeing.

The complaint accuses Boeing of putting “profits over safety” and says the US federal aviation administration (FAA) must also be held accountable for certifying the 737 MAX.

The 737 MAX planes were grounded worldwide following the Ethiopian Airlines disaster, which came five months after a Lion Air crash in Indonesia that killed 189 people.

The doomed Ethiopian flight repeatedly nosedived as the pilots battled to control the nearly full aircraft before it crashed, Ethiopian authorities said on Thursday, while urging Boeing to review its flight control technology on the MAX.

In a statement following Ethiopia’s preliminary report, Boeing said flight data-recorder information indicates the plane had an erroneous angle-of-attack sensor input that activated a system known as MCAS, similar to the Lion Air incident. Rosemount makes the angle-of-attack sensor.

Chicago-based Boeing, which is also the target of lawsuits over the October 29 Indonesia crash, has been working on a software fix and new training guidelines for the MAX.

Lawyers for Stumo’s family said it has also filed a federal tort claim against the FAA over the Ethiopian crash. Stumo, originally from Massachusetts, is the niece of consumer activist Ralph Nader.

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