Here's a few more stupid lawsuits.
http://www.reyeslaw.com/library_news_dmn587.asp
The family of a woman and son killed in a November airplane crash in Queens, N.Y., have filed suit Thursday alleging that American Airlines, Inc. improperly trained its pilots on use of airplane rudders.
http://www.overlawyered.com/archives/03/may2.html#0514a
May 14 -- NTSB blames pilot error, but airport told to pay $10 million. "A Cook County jury awarded $10.45 million to the family of a pilot killed in 1996 when the executive jet he was at the controls of slid off the runway and burned at Palwaukee Municipal Airport. The pilot, Martin Koppie, 53, had been accused in earlier lawsuits of causing the crash that killed three other people." The new verdict, on the other hand, throws $9.9 million worth of blame onto the municipalities of Wheeling and Prospect Heights, which own and operate the airport, for allegedly locating a drainage ditch too close to the runway. "In a 1998 report, the National Transportation Safety Board faulted Koppie for not aborting the takeoff and co-pilot Whitener for not taking 'sufficient remedial action.' In 2001, a Cook County jury awarded $18.9 million to Whitener's family, who had argued that Koppie caused the crash and Chicago-based Aon Corp. was responsible as his employer." (Michael Higgins, "$10 million award in '96 plane crash", Chicago Tribune, May 7).
http://www.overlawyered.com/archives/01/oct1.html#1010c
October 10-11 -- "Man Thought He Was Dead, Sues Airline". Scott Bender of Philadelphia was snoozing when the U.S. Airways flight from North Carolina landed at the Birmingham, Alabama airport and the crew left him there in the little plane until he woke up. It was really dark, says his lawyer, and Bender "didn't know if he was alive or dead" -- it turned out the former. Now he wants money for the fright and other harms. (Chanda Temple, Birmingham News, Oct. 4).
http://www.overlawyered.com/archives/01/aug3.html#0824a
August 24-26 -- "Delta passenger wins $1.25 mln for landing trauma". Outwardly uninjured after a terrifying emergency landing en route to Cincinnati in 1996, Kathy Weaver has nonetheless won $1.25 million from Delta Air Lines after her lawyer persuaded a Montana jury that the episode had caused her to suffer post-traumatic stress syndrome and an aggravation of her pre-existing depression. The judge ruled that "her terror during the landing led to physical changes within the brain that could be defined as injury". (Reuters/Yahoo, Aug. 23; PPrune thread) (more on white-knuckle lotto: Oct. 19, 2000, Oct. 8, 1999).
Just what we need:
http://planecrashlawyersnetwork.com/