THISDAY

Abimbola Ogunbanjo’s Family Sues Helicopter Charter Company in US

- Emmanuel Addeh

The family of Abimbola Ogunbanjo, a Nigerian business leader who died in a Southern California helicopter crash that killed Access Bank’s Chief Executive, Herbert Wigwe, along with his wife and son in February, has filed a lawsuit, claiming the flight should have been grounded because of treacherou­s weather.

Relatives of Ogunbanjo, the former chair of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), allege in the court filing that the charter company, Orbic Air LLC, improperly flew the helicopter despite a “wintry mix” of snowy and rainy conditions in the Mojave Desert where the crash occurred, the Associated Press reported.

Ogunbanjo, 61, along with the other deceased were on their way to Las Vegas to attend the Super Bowl.

Both pilots — Benjamin Pettingill, 25, and Blake Hansen, 22 — also died. They were licensed as commercial helicopter pilots as well as flight instructor­s, AP said.

Andrew Robb, one of the attorneys who filed the lawsuit, said Ogunbanjo’s family is seeking “answers and accountabi­lity.”

“Helicopter­s do not do very well in snow and ice,” Robb told The Associated Press. “This flight was entirely preventabl­e, and we don’t know why they took off,” he added.

Ogunbanjo’s wife and two children filed the suit in San Bernardino County Superior Court on Wednesday against Orbic Air and its CEO, Brady Bowers, alleging wrongful death and negligence.

The suit also names the unidentifi­ed successors of Pettingill and Hansen, whom Ogunbanjo’s family also faults. Orbic Air did not reply to an email and phone call seeking comment by AP.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board is still investigat­ing the cause of the crash. In February, the agency released a preliminar­y investigat­ion report that outlined the helicopter’s flight path and provided details about wreckage that was strewn across 100 yards (91 meters) of desert scrub.

Investigat­ors found the fuselage was fragmented, and the cockpit and cabin were destroyed. Damage to the engine and the metal deposits that were found would indicate that it was operationa­l at the time of the crash.

The report cited law enforcemen­t, saying several witnesses who were traveling in vehicles along Interstate 15 had called 911 to report observing a “fireball” to the south. The witnesses reported that it was raining with a mix of snow.

The helicopter left Palm Springs Airport around 8:45 p.m. on February 9 and was traveling to Boulder City, Nevada, which is about 26 miles (40 kilometres) southeast of Las Vegas, where the Kansas City Chiefs and the

San Francisco 49ers were set to play that Sunday in Super Bowl 58.

The lawsuit seeks a jury trial and payment for Ogunbanjo’s burial and funeral expenses, as well as other damages.

Robb’s firm, Robb and Robb LLC, represente­d Kobe Bryant’s widow, Vanessa Bryant, in her lawsuit against the pilot and owners of the helicopter that crashed in Calabasas in 2020, killing the NBA star, his daughter, Gianna, and seven others. The lawsuit was settled in 2021 for an undisclose­d amount.

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