Boeing, Honeywell sued by Air India crash victim families

Members of Indian Army's engineering arm prepare to remove the wreckage of an Air India aircraft, bound for London's Gatwick Airport, which crashed during take-off from an airport in Ahmedabad, India June 14.

Members of Indian Army's engineering arm prepare to remove the wreckage of an Air India aircraft, bound for London's Gatwick Airport, which crashed during take-off from an airport in Ahmedabad, India June 14. (Amit Dave, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Families of Air India crash victims sued Boeing and Honeywell in Delaware court.
  • Lawsuit claims faulty fuel switches caused crash killing 260 people on June 12.
  • FAA and Indian investigators suggest pilot error not switches led to the crash.

AHMEDABAD, India — The families of four passengers killed in the June 12 crash of an Air India Boeing 787 said in a lawsuit that the accident resulted from allegedly faulty fuel switches, which the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration has said do not appear to have caused the accident that killed 260 people.

The lawsuit filed on Wednesday in Delaware Superior Court blames Boeing and Honeywell, which made the switches, for the crash seconds after Flight 171 took off for London from the Indian city of Ahmedabad.

The plaintiffs point to a 2018 FAA advisory that recommended, but did not mandate, operators of several Boeing models, including the 787, inspect the fuel cutoff switches' locking mechanism to ensure it could not be accidentally moved.

India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau's preliminary investigation report into the crash stated that Air India had not conducted the suggested inspections, and that maintenance records showed that the throttle control module, which includes the fuel switches, was replaced in 2019 and 2023 on the plane involved in the crash.

The report noted "all applicable airworthiness directives and alert service bulletins were complied with on the aircraft, as well as engines."

Boeing declined to comment, and Honeywell did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A cockpit recording of dialogue between the jet's two pilots suggests that the captain cut the flow of fuel to the plane's engines, as Reuters previously reported.

The lawsuit maintains that the switches are in a place in the cockpit where they were more likely to be inadvertently pushed, which "effectively guaranteed that normal cockpit activity could result in inadvertent fuel cutoff."

However, aviation safety experts told Reuters that they could not be accidentally flipped based on their location and design.

The lawsuit appears to be the first in the U.S. over the crash.

It seeks unspecified damages for the deaths of Kantaben Dhirubhai Paghadal, Naavya Chirag Paghadal, Kuberbhai Patel and Babiben Patel, who were among the 229 passengers who died.

Twelve crew members and 19 people on the ground were also killed. One passenger survived. The plaintiffs are citizens of and live in either India or Britain.

Indian investigators' preliminary report appeared to exonerate Boeing and engine maker GE Aerospace, but some family groups have criticized investigators and the press as too focused on the pilots' actions.

Although most accidents are caused by a combination of factors, legal experts say lawyers representing victims' families tend to target manufacturers because they do not face the same limits on liability enjoyed by airlines. Such strategies can also increase the prospect of using U.S. courts, which are widely seen as more generous to plaintiffs than many foreign courts.

Contributing: Dan Catchpole

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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