RedDogC130
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A federal judge on Wednesday certified a class action lawsuit against World Airways Inc. that stems from the airline's decision in late 2003 to halt flights to Nigeria, which left passengers stranded.
In November 2005, the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) found Peachtree City, Ga.-based World Airways Inc. "violated U.S. laws and regulations and engaged in unfair and deceptive practices in its conduct of flights between the United States and Nigeria," according to the plaintiffs' co-lead counsel. The findings were contained in a consent order entered between World Airways and DOT, which imposed a $350,000 fine on World Airways. DOT began its investigation in February 2004.
"We sought a DOT investigation because we were certain World Airways had broken the law," said John Edozie, one of plaintiffs' counsel. "We are happy to see that the DOT has succeeded in getting World to accept legal responsibility for its misconduct. After almost two years of litigation, we expect that a jury will come to the same conclusion as the DOT -- World Airways violated the law and engaged in unfair and deceptive practices."
World Airways is a subsidiary of Peachtree City, Ga.-based World Air Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: WLDAE). The company's 430 pilots went on strike in late January.
http://atlanta.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2006/01/30/daily29.html
And the hits just keep on coming.
In November 2005, the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) found Peachtree City, Ga.-based World Airways Inc. "violated U.S. laws and regulations and engaged in unfair and deceptive practices in its conduct of flights between the United States and Nigeria," according to the plaintiffs' co-lead counsel. The findings were contained in a consent order entered between World Airways and DOT, which imposed a $350,000 fine on World Airways. DOT began its investigation in February 2004.
"We sought a DOT investigation because we were certain World Airways had broken the law," said John Edozie, one of plaintiffs' counsel. "We are happy to see that the DOT has succeeded in getting World to accept legal responsibility for its misconduct. After almost two years of litigation, we expect that a jury will come to the same conclusion as the DOT -- World Airways violated the law and engaged in unfair and deceptive practices."
World Airways is a subsidiary of Peachtree City, Ga.-based World Air Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: WLDAE). The company's 430 pilots went on strike in late January.
http://atlanta.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2006/01/30/daily29.html
And the hits just keep on coming.