An Illinois federal judge set two trial dates Thursday to help loosen what he called a clear "logjam" of more than a hundred cases stemming from the crash of Ethiopian Air Flight 302, though Boeing and the victims' families disagreed over the fairest case-picking methodology.
Where is Antoine s cellphone?
“I don’t know why I still have this feeling. Like I want this. I want the phone,” Lopez-Lewis said.
Her husband, she said, recorded everything with his phone. Wouldn’t he have recorded the final moments of that flight?
She recalls an Ethiopian Airlines representative contacting her to say they were clearing the site where Flight 302, using a Boeing 737 Max 8 plane, crashed on March 10, 2019. The belongings of all 157 passengers and crew who died would be collected and cataloged.
Once complete, the airline would post the list so families could claim the items that belonged to their loved ones.
MIAMI – Ribbeck Law Chartered (Ribbeck) today announced the first settlement of lawsuits filed against airplane manufacturer Boeing by victims of the crash of Ethiopian Airlines (ET) Flight 302.
In a press release, the firm said that this is the first ET Air Flight 302 case to settle from dozens of lawsuits filed in US Federal Court in Chicago against Boeing by Ribbeck. Lawsuits were filed on behalf of victims’ families in the aftermath of two fatal crashes involving the same Boeing 737 Max 8 model plane.
Ribbeck, with headquarters in Chicago, IL, also home of Boeing, has sought reasonable and fair compensation for the families of the victims of these tragedies. Ms. Kelly Wood-Prince of Ribbeck remarked, “While the amounts cannot be disclosed, as they are confidential, we are pleased with the results.”