According to a new case, an Inclood couple sued Jet Blue after a watermelon -sized ice crashed into their bedroom, according to a new case.
At a federal Aviation administrative hearing, Jet Blue urges the case to be aware of the issue that occurred a year ago. The same plane was suspected of abandoning the ice in a house in Massachusetts a few months ago.
Michael Reese and Leia Ferrarini – on January 1, 2024 at their Inkloot home, “escapes from a disaster injury” – a snow -up accident through their roof, sues the land that says a little above their pillows. Now, the Los Angeles International Airport complains to the need to move from the fear and insomnia of their lives from the “every five minutes” flying upward, and the couple's calling for their dream home. According to court documents after submitting Jet Blue, the pair demands Million 1 million compensation.
On February 2023, after a month of the Inkloot incident, FAA reported that the plane was checked for a drinking water drain and valve issues, and a valve was found to be incorrect, which reportedly caused the leak. But the aircraft must have been investigated when the aircraft was first reported in July 2023 – the case says that Shirley would damage a roof in the mosquito a month before dropping the snow in another home. “We heard an explosion, basically,” the homeowner CBS told News After the August 2023 incident, he said he thought the house had struck lightning. “Bob loudly. I have never heard.”
“Before January 1, 2024, Jet Blue was noticed, but the drinking water system failed to investigate the value and drainage issues. If Jet Blue had done so in July 2023, there would have been no big ice in the plaintiff's house,” October filed in October. The case says.
In response to the complaint, Jet Blue Reese and Ferrarini's claims said that it had followed all government regulations and industrial standards. This month, the airline argued that the case should go to the federal court rather than the Los Angeles High Court, because its headquarters is in New York.
Christopher Kanne, Reese and Ferrarini's lawyer, and Jet Blue did not immediately respond to the Times commenting on Thursday afternoon.