Lawsuits Begin Following Toronto Crash
A Delta passenger has filed one of the first lawsuits against the carrier following a flight that crashed at Toronto Pearson International Airport on Monday.
A Delta passenger has filed one of the first lawsuits against the carrier following a flight that crashed at Toronto Pearson International Airport on Monday.
Delta confirmed that all 21 injured passengers who were aboard Endeavor Air’s Flight 4819 have been discharged from the hospital.
Delta has offered $30,000 to each one of the 76 passengers aboard Endeavor flight 4819 that crashed while landing in Toronto.
Aviation attorneys at the Chicago-based law firm Clifford Law Offices have filed pre-case claims against the FAA and Army.
The Federal Aviation Administration has issued a new airworthiness directive for Boeing 747-400, 747-400F, 747-8F, and 747-8i aircraft.
The agency’s chair says it is seeing “conflicting information in the data” regarding the helicopter’s altitude before the collision.
The aircraft was arriving from Vancouver, British Columbia, with six crew members and 134 passengers on board. There were no injuries.
A passenger has filed a lawsuit against American for negligence, alleging the carrier put a 737 back into service despite it being in an “unsafe condition.”
Divers from the Federal Bureau of Investigation are searching several underwater targets in the Potomac River for remaining aircraft debris.
A Bering Air Cessna Caravan aircraft disappeared from radar on Thursday in western Alaska. The aircraft was carrying 10 people.