Alaska Airlines ordered to pay $3.2M after woman flying home from Hawaii falls, later dies
PORTLAND, Ore. >> A jury has ordered Alaska Airlines to pay $3.2 million to the family of a 75-year-old disabled woman who died four months after falling down a Portland International Airport escalator.
KGW reports the family of Bernice Kekona, of Spokane, Washington, filed a wrongful death suit against Alaska Airlines in December 2017, alleging neglect at the airport contributed to her injuries.
The jury returned its verdict Monday.
In June 2017, Kekona was traveling from Hawaii to Spokane with a transfer of planes in Portland. She was disabled with an amputated leg and other health issues.
At the Portland airport, while trying to get to a gate for her connecting flight, she fell down an escalator, resulting in significant injuries that led to her death, according to the lawsuit.
The Seattle-based airline didn’t immediately respond to an email from The Associated Press seeking comment on the ruling. Federal law requires that airlines assist disabled passengers in transit.
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Alaska Airlines confirmed that Kekona received initial assistance but said she declined additional aid while navigating through the Portland airport, KGW reported.
Kekona’s family said they had requested gate-to-gate service for their mother, who needed wheelchair assistance. According to the complaint, gate agents met Kekona as she deplaned in Portland and provided her a wheelchair ride to the top of a skybridge. She was then left alone, according to the family, and became confused, leading her to tumble in her wheelchair down an escalator.