Dayton Daily News

Lawsuit filed in fatal duck boat sinking seeks $100M

- By Margaret Stafford

The KANSAS CITY, MO. — owners and operators of a tourist boat that sank this month in Missouri, killing 17 people, put profits over people’s safety when they decided to put the Ride the Ducks boat on a lake despite design problems and warnings of severe weather, a lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit filed Sunday in U.S. District Court in Kansas City seeks $100 million in damages on behalf of two of nine members of an Indiana family who died when the tourist boat sank July 19 at Table Rock Lake near Branson. A second lawsuit was filed Monday in state court on behalf of three daughters of William and Michelle Bright, of Higginsvil­le, Missouri, who died in the accident. The wrongful-death lawsuit seeks more than $125,000 in damages.

“This tragedy was the predictabl­e and predicted result of decades of unacceptab­le, greed-driven, and willful ignorance of safety by the Duck Boat industry in the face of specific and repeated warnings that their Duck Boats are death traps for passengers and pose grave danger to the public on water and on land,” the federal lawsuit, filed on behalf of the estates of 76-year-old Ervin Coleman and 2-yearold Maxwell Ly, states.

Robert Mongeluzzi, whose law firm won a $17 million settlement when two Hungarian students drowned on a duck boat in Philadelph­ia in 2010, said at a news conference Monday that the Coleman family wants to know what happened when the boat sank.

“And more importantl­y they want to make sure that no one ever dies again inside a death trap duck boat,” Mongeluzzi said. “They’ve asked that this lawsuit leads the charge to ban duck boats so they no longer kill their passengers and the children who ride them.”

Ripley Entertainm­ent Inc., Ride the Ducks Internatio­nal, Ride the Ducks of Branson, the Herschend Family Entertainm­ent Corp., and Amphibious Vehicle Manufactur­ing are named in the federal suit.

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