Los Angeles Times

Discovery settles fatal crash lawsuit

- By Richard Verrier richard.verrier@latimes.com

Discovery Communicat­ions has settled a wrongfulde­ath lawsuit filed by a cast member who was killed in a 2013 helicopter crash, one of the worst film set accidents in Los Angeles County in decades.

The family of Michael Donatelli, a 45-year-old decorated Iraq war veteran, sued Discovery after the crash in Acton, which occurred during filming of a Discovery Channel military show with the working title “Lone Operator.” The helicopter was flying close to the ground when it hit a slope, killing Donatelli, cameraman Darren Rydstrom and pilot David Gibbs.

A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge approved the settlement Tuesday, said Kevin Boyle, a Los Angeles attorney representi­ng Donatelli’s family. The settlement also ends a similar lawsuit brought by Rydstrom’s family. Terms were confidenti­al.

“The family is very hopeful that a lesson has been learned here and that steps will be taken in the future to prevent this kind of tragedy from happening again,” said Boyle, a partner in Panish, Shea & Boyle.

The crash, which was highlighte­d in The Times report in March on the rise in fatal injuries in the film and TV industry, was the deadliest accident on a film set in Southern California since the 1982 “Twilight Zone: The Movie” helicopter crash near Santa Clarita that killed actor Vic Morrow and two children.

Donatelli, who retired from the military in 2009, launched his own security consulting firm in Pennsylvan­ia when an old Army friend approached him about working on “Lone Operator.” Donatelli was acting as a consultant and narrator on the show.

Donatelli’s family in 2013 filed a wrongful-death lawsuit in Los Angeles County Superior Court against the producers, including Discovery and other companies, alleging that they did not take sufficient safety measures and were negligent in hiring Gibbs.

Records show that Gibbs did not have permission from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to fly in the early-morning hours when the accident occurred. Gibbs had his pilot’s license suspended twice, including in 2003 over an incident in which he piloted a helicopter that flew into a power line as a crew was filming an episode of “Ripley’s Believe It or Not!” near Kingman, Ariz., according to a National Transporta­tion Safety Board report.

Discovery and the other defendants disputed the claims. A spokeswoma­n for Discovery declined to comment on the settlement.

On the same Acton ranch where Donatelli and his colleagues were killed, 48-yearold diver Michael Bridger drowned five months earlier.

The Redondo Beach resident was cleaning a 24-footdeep water tank to be used in an underwater scene for the Walt Disney Studios’ movie “The Lone Ranger.”

State regulators fined the film’s producer, Silver Bullet Production­s, more than $60,000 for serious violations, including not having a standby driver available, not providing a medical examinatio­n to determine an employee’s fitness to dive, and not having a dive master to oversee the work.

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