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Aztec Flyer
...Pilot error and negligence justify legal action.
Seriously? To what useful and constructive end exactly? Enriching lawyers perhaps?
...Pilot error and negligence justify legal action.
Curious. Ever lose someone close due to someone elses negligence? Hint, it doesn't matter how much you're worth.To what useful and constructive end exactly?
Curious. Ever lose someone close due to someone elses negligence? Hint, it doesn't matter how much you're worth.
You’re overthinking the issue. Initially, it has zero to do with the money… rather everything to do with one of the most basic human emotions…grief. Once the attorneys get involved then the money aspects come to the front. In Bryant’s case, the money is probably more a figurative issue. But for your average plaintiff where the sole family bread winner was killed it becomes more a financial survival issue for the family. Just as in some of the other pax’s cases.But that still does not answer the question...to what beneficial end exactly.
What are they expecting?
I have dealt with more than my share of legal disputes in the corporate world over time. Some valuable life lessons have come from that experience.
Perhaps I am misunderstanding the situation.
Uh huh. A TAWS installation in the accident helicopter wouldn't have prevented the crash. At best it would have given the pilot a few seconds knowledge that he had made some rather stupid decisions and was about to die. It's almost certain the CVR would have recorded nothing of probative value.
LOS ANGELES — Legislation introduced Thursday in the House and Senate would require terrain awareness and warning systems and crash-resistant flight data and voice recorders on all helicopters that carry six or more passengers, which the bills’ authors say would prevent tragedies like the Jan. 26 Calabasas crash that killed Kobe Bryant and his daughter.
I have dealt with more than my share of legal disputes in the corporate world over time. Some valuable life lessons have come from that experience.
Perhaps I am misunderstanding the situation. Is this a fight with the insurance companies to pay out on the policy?
Have seen the grief both personally and in other roles. Regardless, to think all tort lawsuits start off strictly as a “money grab” is hardly the truth. What will be interesting is if the pax survivors decide to include the Bryant estate in their claimant.
Shoot, as a lawyer and a potential plaintiff, my own lawyer (and friend) told me what a lawsuit was going to cost and that he thought the defendants would be judgment proof. It likely won't even pay the legal bills. But as I told him, they ****ed me over, and the alternative was zero consequences.I can tell you as a plaintiff on a number of lawsuits in the past and presently that this is exactly correct. Some I do even though it does not pay because it is the right thing to do. Others I do both because I think it is right and because it will at least pay the legal bills.
Shoot, as a lawyer and a potential plaintiff, my own lawyer (and friend) told me what a lawsuit was going to cost and that he thought the defendants would be judgment proof. It likely won't even pay the legal bills. But as I told him, they ****ed me over, and the alternative was zero consequences.
I suspect there is insurance. Probably not hundreds of millions of dollars, but probably a few million. Given the damages, I would anticipate a policy limits settlement in pretty short order.A widow with a net worth in the hundreds of millions of $ is suing the estate of a helicopter pilot...for hundreds of millions of $.
Blood from a stone comes to mind.
Economists would say, "to internalize the externalities." Yeah, no dollar figure will make the family whole. But if there is no consequence to conduct that we deemed to be less than what a reasonable person would do under the same circumstances, then some folks would look at the calculus and decide to make riskier decisions that what are good for society since they bear no cost of their errors when things go south.No I have not. But that still does not answer the question...to what beneficial end exactly.
Yeah, no dollar figure will make the family whole. But if there is no consequence to conduct that we deemed to be less than what a reasonable person would do under the same circumstances, then some folks would look at the calculus and decide to make riskier decisions that what are good for society since they bear no cost of their errors when things go south.
In my opinion, the only person responsible for this incident, is the PIC.
Because money.That may be true. Our jurisprudence system long ago determined that under such circumstances, the master should be held vicariously liable for the negligence of the servant. You face an uphill battle getting a majority to go along with abolishing that rule. Heck, a vocal group of our citizens don't even like the idea of corporations having any rights, let alone immunity for negligent acts of its employees.