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Press Article Excerpts 2001
Lieff
Cabraser has over thirty years of experience in aviation
law. We hope you find the following summaries of aviation
safety and accident articles useful and informative.
For answers to frequently
asked questions on aviation law and the legal rights of victims of airplane crashes
and their families, visit our Aviation Law FAQ page.
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claims.
An
ultrasonic inspection by United Airlines this month on the
tail of one of its Airbus planes uncovered a tiny defect
in the composite material, prompting the carrier to consider
more stringent maintenance requirements.
The special inspection
of three Airbus planes in the United fleet comes after the crash of American
Airlines Flight 587 in Queens last month. More...
December 18, 2001
USA Today, "Key
question remains after crash"
As
federal investigators prepare for what could become a long
probe into the crash last month of an Airbus A300 in New
York, they are asking one key question here, in aircraft
factories in France and Germany and at a NASA materials lab
in Virginia.
American Airlines
Flight 587 took off Nov. 12 in calm skies from John F. Kennedy International
Airport in New York. But about a minute after liftoff it wobbled, the 27-foot
carbon-fiber fin flew off and the jet spiraled into the ground. More...
Fighter
jets built for the Pentagon are routinely inspected with
ultrasound to detect hidden flaws that may develop in lightweight
composite materials used to make such critical parts as the
wings and tail.
But only visual maintenance
inspections were required for the Airbus A300 jetliner that crashed last month
in New York after its composite tail fin broke off. More...
One
of an unglamorous fleet, the plane that crashed last Monday
morning in Queens was an efficient, anonymous workhorse whose
marketers nicknamed the model "The Regional Profit Machine." The
ill-fated Airbus A300 was wider than many planes, carried
lots of people on the short, packed flights from New York
to Miami and the Caribbean, and cost less than other planes
to operate.
Over its 13 years,
it logged 37,550 flight hours, making it a middle-aged plane, and accumulated
a seemingly unremarkable assortment of entries in computer databases detailing
its various aches and ills. More...
A
modern material that has replaced metal in many aircraft
structures has become a central focus of the probe into the
crash of American Airlines Flight 587, raising questions
about possible problems in hundreds of other jets.
The material, used
in the tail fin that broke away from Flight 587, is a composite made of many
layers of carbon fibers embedded in a special resin and molded together under
heat and pressure. However, the material can develop internal flaws, causing
it to weaken and come apart. More...
The
aging fleet of Airbus A300s has a good safety record, but
a growing number of problems have dented the plane's reputation
- including a recent federal finding that said an equipment
flaw risked explosions in the jetliners' fuel tanks.
"We call it
the scare bus," said a flight attendant who was unwilling to be identified. "There
are always maintenance problems on this aircraft. They are getting old. If you
ask me, it was just a matter of time." More...
Pilots
who had flown the American Airlines jetliner that crashed
Monday had reported five incidents of a smoky odor in the
cockpit and dozens of other relatively common problems during
the jet's 13 years of service, but nothing that would foretell
the rare event of an engine disintegrating or separating
intact from a wing. More...
In
his office not far from a runway at London's Heathrow Airport,
Philip Bowles grips an official-looking piece of paper. A
pilot since he was 18 and now CEO of Airfreight Express (AFX),
he is holding a copy of the most important document in aviation
safety: a work card. These government-approved forms are
used to document repair or maintenance of all aircraft. More...
August 17, 2001
Pensacola News Journal (Pensacola,
FL), "Jury awards $480 million in air crash"
An
Escambia County jury has returned a $480 million verdict
against Cessna Aircraft Co., the largest award ever in Northwest
Florida and reportedly the largest nationally involving a
plane crash.
Pilot Jim Cassoutt
of Robertsdale, Ala., his wife and a second passenger were severely burned and
suffered other injuries when the single-engine plane crashed at Coastal Airport
off Nine Mile Road in Pensacola on Aug. 14, 1989.
The five-woman, one-man
jury assessed $400 million in punitive damages Thursday after lawyers successfully
argued that Cessna, the plane's manufacturer, failed to correct a pilot seat
design defect that resulted in more than two dozen deaths and numerous injuries.
Boeing
wants to be exempt from a U.S. rule that may require the
plane maker to redesign Pratt & Whitney engine-control
systems in some 757s because of malfunctions.
The systems malfunctioned
five times in the first 4 million flight hours of 757-200 jets when the engines
produced more or less force than pilots sought, Boeing said in a U.S. Department
of Transportation filing. Pilots did control the planes and stop the engines
in the incidents, which occurred more than six years ago, Boeing said. More...
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