Salt Lake City Fliers Sue Delta After Midair Turbulence Horror

What started as an overnight hop from Salt Lake City to Amsterdam turned into a bruising ordeal, and now 20 passengers from that flight are taking Delta to court. The group filed a lawsuit Friday in Salt Lake City state court over the July 30 incident on Delta Flight 56, when the jet plowed into violent turbulence that injured 24 passengers and seven crew members.

The complaint claims the pilots continued toward developing convective weather despite warnings and that the seatbelt sign was off with no warning to the cabin before the turbulence hit. Plaintiffs say they walked away with bruises, internal injuries, broken bones, and concussions, along with lingering anxiety and other psychological fallout.

What the NTSB found

According to a preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board, the Airbus A330 ran into severe turbulence near Creston, Wyoming, at about 37,000 feet. The aircraft experienced vertical accelerations up to roughly 1.75 g and roll swings as large as 40 degrees.

Flight data show the upset lasted about two and a half minutes, during which the autopilot disengaged while the jet repeatedly climbed and descended. The crew diverted to Minneapolis–Saint Paul, where 24 people were evaluated, and 18 were taken to hospitals. Investigators have recovered flight data and cockpit voice recorder information and are continuing to dig into weather and operational issues, according to the NTSB.

What the lawsuit says

The lawsuit, filed in Salt Lake City, claims the flight crew had been warned about the potential for developing convective weather and thunderstorms, yet kept flying toward the problem area without alerting passengers. The filing lists physical and emotional injuries and identifies plaintiffs from Utah, California, Idaho, Montana, South Carolina, and a family from Norway. Those allegations and details of the complaint were reported by FOX 13 News…

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