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US jury awards $49.5 Million to family of Boeing 737 MAX crash victims

A Chicago jury awarded $49.5 Million to the family of a woman killed in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX in March '2019.

The jury awarded the family of Samya stumo $21 million on Wednesday for her experience during the fatal flight. They also received $16.5 million to compensate for their loss of companionship, and $12 million as compensation for their grief.

This is the second verdict resulting from the fatal crash. A jury in November ordered Boeing to pay over $28 million to a family of an?United Nations environment worker who died in the 2019 crash.

Boeing was hit with dozens of lawsuits following?fatal 737 MAX crash in Indonesia and Ethiopia that killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019.

Stumo, a 24-year-old, worked for the nonprofit ThinkWell and was a traveler on a flight from Ethiopia to Nairobi in Kenya.

Boeing didn't contest liability and punitive damage claims were dismissed against executives of the company and?the manufacturers of plane components. The lawyers for the Stumo family want to have an appeals court reinstate punitive damages claims.

The U.S. aircraft manufacturer has settled over 90% of the civil lawsuits relating to the two accidents. It paid out billions in compensation via lawsuits, non-prosecution agreements and other payments.

Boeing stated on Thursday that "while we have settled?nearly?all of these claims by settlement, families are entitled?to pursue their claims in court, and we respect their rights to do so."

A U.S. court of appeals upheld in March a ruling approving a Justice Department decision dismissing a criminal case filed against Boeing. This allowed the planemaker's avoid prosecution for a charge arising from the two 737 MAX crash.

Boeing agreed to plead guilty to a criminal conspiracy charge in 2024. In May 2025, after President Donald Trump assumed office, the DOJ changed course and dropped its?demand for guilty plea.

Boeing has agreed to pay $444.5 in addition to the $243.6 million fine, as well as $455 million for the improvement of the company's safety and compliance programs.

(source: Reuters)