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Alaska Airlines, Boeing sued $1 billion over flight blowout

Three passengers are currently suing Alaska Airlines and aircraft manufacturer Boeing for $1 billion over a horrific accident that left a cabin panel damaged during takeoff from Portland, Oregon, on January 5. .

Images of the gaping hole in the torso that nearly caused the catastrophe have gone viral, and the passengers who filed the lawsuit have published new reports since the lawsuit was filed, including a story about how the teenager’s shirt was nearly sucked out. He told a horrifying story.

Passenger Kyle Rinker said, “Just five minutes after the plane took off smoothly, I heard a loud popping sound.” KGW News, A door plug blew off, leaving a large hole in a 737 MAX 9 plane.


Plaintiffs Kyle Rinker and Amanda Strickland Instagram/Kyle Linker

“We were just sitting there trying to relax and then all of a sudden that happened. The oxygen masks came down and we were like, ‘Oh, something’s happening.’ I have to wear this. ”

“The wind just picked up. Obviously, you’re flying at 16,000 feet, so all of a sudden it got very, very cold,” he added.


Defective door plug on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282
This photo released by the National Transportation Safety Board shows a defective door plug on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282. A panel used to block off an area secured by the emergency exit door of a Boeing 737 Max 9 jetliner exploded on January 5, shortly after the flight. After taking off from Portland, the plane returned to Portland International Airport. AP

Rinker, his girlfriend Amanda Strickland, and another passenger, Kevin Kwok, filed the lawsuit late last month in Multnomah County, Oregon, on behalf of passengers on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282.

The defendants say they ignored obvious warning signs and the fight should never have started.

Rinker and Strickland, both of Portland, were seated two rows behind 15-year-old Jack. A man lost his shirt during the riot. in flight, linker Images posted on X Of chaos.

“This is primarily about a system issue at Boeing that puts the lives of all travelers on Boeing aircraft at risk,” said Jonathan Johnson, an attorney for the plaintiffs. “They should not believe in luck to avoid killing the large number of people on the plane.”

Mr Johnson said the aircraft manufacturer had acknowledged its role in the explosion and vowed to fix it to prevent such problems in the future, but said the lawsuit would prompt the companies to prioritize safety. .

“A lot of people have said to me, ‘Oh, I’m sorry for what you went through,’ but I’m like, ‘Oh, it could have been worse, it could still have been worse.’ ‘I think about that almost every day,’ Rinker said.

Boeing and Alaska Airlines declined to comment.

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