Helicopter crash was ‘accident waiting to happen’, says Leicester owner’s family

Helicopter crash was ‘accident waiting to happen’, says Leicester owner’s family
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Helicopter crash was ‘accident waiting to happen’, says Leicester owner’s family
Author: Sophie Robinson
Published: Jan, 28 2025 16:54

A helicopter which crashed and burst into flames outside the King Power Stadium killing the former Leicester City FC owner was an “accident waiting to happen”, his family has claimed. Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, referred to during his inquest as Khun Vichai, died with four others on October 27 2018 after the Leonardo AW169 helicopter plummeted to the ground after taking off from the pitch and became engulfed in a “wall of flames”.

Image Credit: The Standard

An inquest into the deaths of Khun Vichai, the helicopter’s pilot Eric Swaffer, co-pilot Izabela Lechowicz, and passengers Nusara Suknamai and Kaveporn Punpare concluded on Tuesday at Leicester City Hall after the jury recorded the five deaths as accidental.

Image Credit: The Standard

Khun Vichai’s family has alleged that the helicopter manufacturer Leonardo S.p.A. is liable for his death and launched a £2.15 billion legal claim before the inquest began. Philip Shepherd KC, representing the Thai businessman’s family, read a statement outside the city hall after the inquest which said the crash was “an accident waiting to happen”.

Image Credit: The Standard

He said: “Whilst it was no part of the inquest process to apportion blame, the evidence heard during this inquest told the story of basic engineering failures by Leonardo. “The inquest heard evidence that the design was such that it was just a matter of time before something catastrophic occurred, it was an accident waiting to happen.

“They were innocent victims of a tragic accident that never needed to happen. “During the two-and-a-half-week inquest, the jury heard that the helicopter crashed even though it was still new, even though it was properly maintained, and even though it met the minimum certification standards, and even though there was no pilot error whatsoever.

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