Miami Herald

Father of Surfside victim says $1 billion settlement won’t bring families closure

- BY MARTIN VASSOLO mvassolo@miamiheral­d.com Martin Vassolo: 305-376-2071, martindvas­solo

The father of a victim of the Surfside condo collapse said the nearly $1 billion legal settlement reached Wednesday won’t buy closure for his family.

His daughter, 27-yearold Miami attorney Nicole Langesfeld, was among the 98 people who died in the June 24 tragedy at the Champlain Towers South. Her husband Luis Sadovnic, 28, died in the collapse as well.

“There’s absolutely no amount of money that will compensate for the loss of my daughter,” Pablo Langesfeld said.

The families of the victims and survivors of the collapse are members of a class-action lawsuit filed in Miami-Dade Circuit Court against a string of defendants — including the developers of the Eighty Seven Park condo tower next door, the condo associatio­n, a law firm and engineerin­g firms involved with the properties.

The proposed $997 million settlement may bring “some measure of

relief” to the families, an attorney for the plaintiffs said in court.

But Langesfeld said the settlement is disappoint­ing because nobody is taking responsibi­lity for the collapse. He said the only way to bring any sort of closure to the families will be finding out what caused Champlain Towers to fall down.

“There’s many defendants and nobody is taking responsibi­lity,” he said. “My main focus is who is

responsibl­e for the deaths of the 98 people. It’s not about the money.”

The National Institute of Standards and Technology is leading a federal probe into the collapse, while the town of Surfside has hired a consulting engineer to conduct a parallel investigat­ion into what led to the building failure.

Defendants in the lawsuit also hired engineerin­g experts to conduct other tests.

Surfside Mayor Shlomo

Danzinger said in a statement that while some of those investigat­ions may end now that a settlement has been reached, the town will continue its probe while funding remains. He said commission­ers would then have a final say on whether to continue paying for the investigat­ion.

“Additional­ly we were told by NIST a little while ago that they would be continuing their investigat­ion regardless of a settlement, in order to find a cause so they can propose changes to regulation­s if needed,” Danzinger said.

The settlement means families would no longer have to continue the “long and painful litigation process,” he said.

“While the settlement will help families with a lot of the financial burdens and stress, it’s important to note that no amount of money could ever be considered adequate compen- sation for the loss of life,” Danzinger said.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Martin Langesfeld and his father, Pablo, hold a framed high school soccer jersey that belonged to Nicole Langesfeld. ‘There’s absolutely no amount of money that will compensate for the loss of my daughter,’ Pablo Langesfeld said.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Martin Langesfeld and his father, Pablo, hold a framed high school soccer jersey that belonged to Nicole Langesfeld. ‘There’s absolutely no amount of money that will compensate for the loss of my daughter,’ Pablo Langesfeld said.
 ?? ?? Newlyweds Nicole ‘Nicky’ Langesfeld and Luis Sadovnic died in the Champlain Towers condo collapse.
Newlyweds Nicole ‘Nicky’ Langesfeld and Luis Sadovnic died in the Champlain Towers condo collapse.

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