
The family of a Czech billionaire Petr Kellner who died in a heli-skiing crash in Alaska in 2021 says in a lawsuit that he survived the accident but succumbed to his injuries in the hours between the crash and when a rescue was launched.
The lawsuit alleges negligence and seeks punitive and other damages. Kellner, at the time of his death, was the richest man in the Czech Republic.
The lawsuit names as defendants Soloy Helicopters; Triumvirate LLC, which owns and operates Tordrillo Mountain Lodge; and Third Edge Alaska LLC, which was doing business as a heli-ski guide service but administratively dissolved last year.
Five people died in the crash in the Chugach Mountains 34 kilometers southeast of Palmer in one of the deadliest heli-skiing aviation accidents in North America.
The sole survivor, Czech snowboarder David Horvath, is separately suing the lodge over injuries he suffered. Palmer is about 72 kilometers north of Anchorage. Horvathโs attorney, Tracey Knutson, said Kellner and a guide lived through the impact but died before rescuers arrived.
A final crash report from the National Transportation Safety Board is expected later this year, the agencyโs Alaska chief said.
โTriumvirate LLC and its employees again express condolences to the families who lost loved ones and to the survivor who was injured in the helicopter crash,โ the statement said. โTo be clear, Triumvirate LLC was not responsible for the crash and there is no merit to the claims against Triumvirate LLC.โ
Kellner was seriously injured but alive after the crash, according to the wrongful death lawsuit filed on behalf of his family. The lawsuit does not provide details on the nature of his injuries or his cause of death.
The companies should have known about the crash immediately and notified authorities but failed to monitor the location of the helicopter and failed to maintain contact with the pilot and guide, the lawsuit alleges. An emergency location transmitter installed in the helicopter did not activate on impact, the lawsuit states.
The men originally planned to stay at a lodge property near Skwentna but a COVID-19 case prompted them to stay at a home on Wasilla Lake instead.
Horvath, trapped in his seat after suffering broken ribs and dislocated knees, wasnโt extricated for nearly six hours, according to his attorney, and lost all the fingers on his left hand and some on his right to frostbite.
Support Prague Morning!
We are proud to provide our readers from around the world with independent, and unbiased news for free.
Our dedicated team supports the local community, foreign residents and visitors of all nationalities through our website, social media and newsletter.
We appreciate that not everyone can afford to pay for our services but if you are able to, we ask you to support Prague Morning by making a contribution โ no matter how small ๐ .
-
NEWSLETTER
Subscribe for our daily news