Family launch £2bn claim over helicopter crash that killed former Leicester owner
The family of the former Leicester City owner killed in a
helicopter crash have launched a £2.15 billion ($2.63 billion) legal claim
against the manufacturers of the aircraft, it was announced Friday.
Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha and four others were killed when the Thai
billionaire's personal helicopter crashed shortly after taking off from the
Premier League club's King Power Stadium in October 2018.
Srivaddhanaprabha's family allege Leonardo S.p.A., which
manufactured the helicopter, is liable for his death.
They are now seeking £2.15bn in compensation for loss of earnings
as a result of his death, the pain he experienced before he died, and funeral
expenses, according to the family's legal representatives, Stewarts Law.
A report by Britain's Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB)
said "serious concerns" had been raised about the helicopter's
safety, according to Stewarts.
It said the family had started action at London's High Court on
Friday, adding: "The report found the crash was caused by the seizure of a
key component located in the tail rotor, which Leonardo had identified in the
design phase as being critical, and its failure catastrophic.
"This failure prompted a sequence of further failures which
drove the helicopter into an uncontrollable and accelerating spin until it
crashed and erupted into flames."
Multiple failures in Leonardo's design process caused the
component to seize, Stewarts said, adding: "The AAIB report concluded
there was nothing the pilot could have done to prevent the crash."
At the time of the crash, Srivaddhanaprabha's Thai travel retail
group, King Power, earned more than £2.5 billion a year in revenue, the firm
said. Its net profit reached £237 million during the year before his death, it
added.
Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha, who succeeded his father as Leicester
chairman, said: "My family feels the loss of my father as much today as we
ever have done.
"That my own children and their cousins will never know their
grandfather compounds our suffering."
He added: "We have reflected on the conclusions of the AAIB
report and thought carefully about how we wished to proceed.
"My father trusted Leonardo when he bought that helicopter
but the conclusions of the report into his death show that his trust was
fatally misplaced.
"I hold them wholly responsible for his death."
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