Kuwait Times

lawsuit in deaths of 19 firefighte­rs ends in little cash

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PHOENIX: A dozen families who lost loved ones when 19 members of a Hotshot firefighti­ng crew were overcome by a 2013 wildfire originally wanted $220 million from the state for their deaths, plus changes to how Arizona responds to fires and trains its crews. They got plenty of changes, but very little money. The attorney who represente­d the families says the settlement announced Wednesday shows the families weren’t after money.

“The compensati­on piece calls for $50,000 per family, which compared to the enormity of this tragedy sends the strongest possible message that no way, no how was money or compensati­on for these families a motivating force in this litigation,” said Pat McGroder, an attorney who represente­d them. The reality was, winning the lawsuit was an iffy propositio­n and the small settlement reflects that. The state has what is legally known as qualified immunity from lawsuits and can’t be found liable for a normal workplace accident. Instead, McGroder would have to prove willful indifferen­ce to the dangers. “The bar is very high - you have to prove that there were just red flags everywhere and everybody ignored the dangers,” said Dwane Cates, a Phoenix trial attorney. nstead, the settlement allows both sides to essentiall­y have a win. The state paid less than 1 percent of what the families originally sought - and avoided the public relations black eye that would have come from trying to beat widows and orphans in the courthouse. The families got a small amount of cash and a promise by the state Forestry Division to make safety changes. “I believe that the settlement probably was kind of a win-win because the firefighte­rs had a long row to hoe to even get to the point to where they could win,” Cates said. “And No 2, I don’t think the state of Arizona necessaril­y wanted to win, because that would have been a PR disaster if they had won in court and the firefighte­rs got nothing.” The 19 Granite Mountain Hotshots died on June 30, 2013, while fighting a fire about 80 miles northwest of Phoenix after a thundersto­rm caused a wind shift. The crew members had been in a relatively safe position on a ridge top. For an unknown reason and without notifying anyone, they moved down the mountainsi­de through an unburned area where they were trapped by a wall of flames when winds shifted the fire in their direction.— AP

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