Continental Airlines Convicted of Involuntary Manslaughter in Concorde Crash That Killed 113

Continental Airlines Inc. and one of its mechanics were convicted by a French court Monday of involuntary manslaughter in the deaths of 113 people in the crash 10 years ago of an Air France Concorde. The company was ordered to pay $1.6 million in damages and fines, Bloomberg reports.

In 2002, French investigators issued a final report that said the Air France plane hit a strip of metal that fell off a Continental flight that had taken off before the Concorde. The investigators said that the metal tore into the Concord’s wheel, sending debris into its fuel tanks and sparking a disastrous fire.

The French court found Monday that  Continental’s  negligence was responsible for the crash, and ordered the airline to pay a a $265,000 fine, and $1.43 million in damages to Air France. Judge Dominique Andreassier said there was an “incontestable link” between Continental’s negligence and the crash of the plane.

John Taylor, a Houston-based mechanic for Continental, was also found guilty and received a 15-month suspended sentence and a $2,650 fine for ignoring the risks of using the wrong materials in the maintenance of the jet.

The judge, however, acquitted three French aviation officials and a Continental manager of wrongdoing.

The decision comes seven years after the Concorde’s last commercial takeoff.

The July, 2000, crash killed 100 passengers, nine crew members and four people who were on the ground in a hotel the jet slammed into.

Continental, which had argued that the Concorde caught fire before striking the titanium strip on the runway, said that it strongly disagreed with the “absurd finding” and that it plans to appeal the verdict. “It is a political decision, a decision that suits all the French parties,” said Olivier Metzner, a lawyer for Continental. “Once again, it is the French interests that are of concern.”

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