The husband of a patient killed in last week's medical helicopter crash is going to court, claiming the operator took unnecessary risks by running with low fuel.
Terry Tacoronte's husband, Victor, filed a lawsuit today in Clay County Circuit Court against Air Methods Corp. of Englewood, Colo., LifeNet Air Medical Services and Heartland Regional Medical Center.
The lawsuit contends that Air Methods didn't put enough fuel in the Eurocopter AS350 helicopter to transport Tacoronte from a hospital in Bethany, Mo., to Liberty Hospital. "Terry Tacoronte was killed as a direct result of the careless, improper, negligent reckless actions of the defendants," the suit alleges.
Officials from Air Methods and the hospital declined comment this afternoon.
The lawsuit charges that Air Methods didn't have a policy in place for transporting patients with adequate fuel reserves.
"This was more than negligence. It was an inexcusable accident based on a flawed operating policy," said Kansas City attorney Gary C. Robb.
Robb said medical helicopters rarely run on a full fuel tank because of weight issues associated with the aircraft and the on-board equipment.
The National Transportation Safety Board has been looking at the aircraft's fuel level in its investigation of last Friday night's crash in Clay County that killed all four aboard.
Federal aviation officials said the pilot indicated he wanted to stop for fuel at the Midwest National Air Center near Excelsior Springs.
A preliminary report on the crash is due out within the next week, but the full investigation probably won't be complete for about a year or so.
Robb said that all indications point to the aircraft running out of fuel. Robb said the pilot couldn't be blamed in this case because he was only following corporate policy.
Air Methods bills itself as the world's largest air ambulance operator with a fleet of about 300 helicopters and about 2,700 full-time employees. The company had total revenues of $562 million in 2010.
The Kansas City Star
www.kansascity.com
Thursday, September 1, 2011 9:31 p.m.