Stay updated with breaking news from Dan mastromarco. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Updated on April 29, 2021 at 10:39 am NBCUniversal, Inc. A Southwest Airlines flight attendant is suing the Dallas-based airline company in a wrongful death lawsuit alleging she caught COVID-19 at a mandatory training and transmitted the virus to her husband, who died from it a month later. Carol Madden, 69, lives in Pennsylvania and is based out of Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport. On July 13, 2020, she attended a mandatory training for flight attendants according to her attorney Dan Mastromarco. Download our mobile app for iOS or Android to get alerts for local breaking news and weather. There s a lot of intimate handling of various materials that flight attendants have to use, of course, they re training them for safety precautions during flights, said Mastromarco. They have to handle placards, they have hooded face masks from time to time, they have to handle door handles, they have to shout, sometimes scream, various safe ....
Flight Attendant Sues Southwest Airlines After Husband Dies From COVID-19 nbcbayarea.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nbcbayarea.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Southwest Airlines has touted COVID safety measures for passengers. A lawsuit claims the airline didn t employ the precautions for flight attendants. ....
I love my airline, but they didn t love me back : Southwest flight attendant blames airline for husband s COVID death Dawn Gilbertson, USA TODAY A Southwest Airlines flight attendant has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the airline, alleging that lax COVID protocols during mandatory training last summer and slack contact tracing after an attendee tested positive led to her husband s death from the virus. Carol Madden, a 69-year-old Baltimore-based flight attendant who has worked for Southwest since 2016, is seeking more than $3 million in damages for what the lawsuit says was the airline s negligence, according to the suit filed in U.S. District Court in Maryland. ....
. (Tribune News Service) A Southwest Airlines flight attendant has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the airline, alleging that lax COVID-19 protocols during mandatory training last summer, and slack contact tracing after an attendee tested positive, led to her husband s death from the virus. Carol Madden, a 69-year-old Baltimore-based flight attendant who has worked for Southwest since 2016, is seeking more than $3 million in damages for what the lawsuit says was the airline s negligence, according to the suit filed in U.S. District Court in Maryland. She and her husband, Bill, a veteran and retired railroad signal engineer who drove her home from the one-day training session at Baltimore-Washington International Airport in July, got sick days after the training and eventually tested positive for COVID-19. Bill s oxygen levels plunged, and his health deteriorated so rapidly that he couldn t take his own temperature. He died a few weeks later in a York, Penns ....