Boeing plane crash: Coroner rules Britons unlawfully killed

1 year ago 26
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Joanna Toole

By Theo Leggett & Jemma Dempsey

Business correspondent and business reporter, BBC News

Three British people who died in a plane crash were unlawfully killed, a coroner has ruled.

Sam Pegram, Oliver Vick and Joanna Toole were among 157 people who died aboard a Boeing 737 Max airliner in Ethiopia in 2019.

Lawyers for the families had sought a verdict of unlawful killing ahead of an inquest into their loved ones deaths.

The court heard flight ET302 from Addis Ababa to Kenya crashed shortly after take-off because of a design flaw.

A sensor failure in the flight control software, designed to make the plane easier and more predictable to fly, deployed at the wrong time and pushed the aircraft into a catastrophic dive.

Despite the pilots' efforts to save wrest control of the plane it crashed in remote farmland outside the Ethiopian capital.

West Sussex coroner Penelope Schofield said the incident occurred as a result of a series of failures relating to the development and operation of the flight control software, known as MCAS.

Two employees of the manufacturer, she said, had deliberately deceived regulators and operators of the 737 Max over the operation of a safety critical system.

'Like losing part of yourself'

The inquest heard Mr Pegram's parents describe the humanitarian worker as a kind, compassionate man with an infectious sense of humour.

"He had a passion for human rights, but also had the drive and inner strength to make a difference," his father Mark said.

Ms Toole's father explained how his daughter, a sustainability campaigner, had "the rare combination of empathy for animals and people".

The death of a child, he said was "like losing a part of yourself," he added.

Mr Vick, who was also a humanitarian worker, was described by his mother Cheryl as a devoted father to his daughters, who had an "unwavering focus on making the world a better place for as many people as possible".

Abdulqadir Qasim, a former Somali refugee, who arrived in the UK aged 25 had been on his way to Kenya to have a meeting about a new job when he died.

In a video statement, his wife Qamar described how he had been a "wonderful husband and father".

His youngest son, she said, had been a toddler at the time of the accident and could not remember his dad.

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