Grand Canyon Helicopter Crash Lawsuit Reached Reported $100 Million Settlement
Follow-up reporting on the Jonathan Udall case showed that a Nevada judge approved a reported $100 million settlement after the 2018 Grand Canyon helicopter crash involving Papillon Airways and Airbus Helicopters. Later coverage and NTSB findings kept the focus on the post-crash fire, prolonged rescue, and whether a crash-resistant fuel system could have made the accident survivable.
Incident Summary
Crash Area
What Happened in the Grand Canyon Crash
Jonathan Udall was one of six passengers aboard a Papillon sightseeing helicopter that crashed in the Grand Canyon West area on February 10, 2018. Early Associated Press coverage, later republished by The Washington Post, said the Airbus EC130 B4 went down on the Hualapai Reservation outside the national park. Three British tourists were pronounced dead at the scene, while Udall and his wife Ellie Milward Udall later died after suffering severe burn injuries.
That first wave of reporting also framed the legal fight that followed. Udall’s parents sued Papillon Airways and Airbus, alleging the helicopter should have been equipped with a crash-resistant fuel system designed to prevent fuel from spreading after a hard impact. According to the complaint described by AP, Jonathan Udall suffered burns over more than 95 percent of his body and died on February 22, 2018, after 12 days in a Las Vegas trauma center.
Follow-up reporting in 2021 added more detail about the crash sequence. Newsweek, citing the NTSB’s final report, said the pilot described a “violent gust of wind” before the helicopter spun out of control and hit the ground. The same reporting said witnesses saw at least two 360-degree turns before impact and that the remote canyon location and communication problems slowed the medical response.
What Later Reporting Added About the Investigation
The final NTSB findings mattered because they narrowed the factual dispute. Newsweek reported that investigators found no evidence of a mechanical problem with the helicopter and concluded the probable cause was loss of control related to tailwind conditions, possible downdrafts, and turbulence. But the report also noted that the helicopter was not equipped with a crash-resistant fuel system and identified the post-crash fire as the most significant survival factor.
That distinction is what turned the case into more than a story about bad weather. The legal issue was not just why the helicopter came down, but why the crash became so deadly after impact. Follow-up coverage said the Udall family argued Jonathan would have survived the accident without the ruptured fuel system and the fire that followed. Newsweek also reported that Papillon later retrofitted its fleet with fuel tanks that expand and seal on impact and improved canyon emergency supplies and communications equipment.
How the Helicopter Crash Lawsuit Reached a Reported $100 Million Settlement
By January 2024, the wrongful death case had moved from allegations to a record-sized resolution. ABC News and the Las Vegas Review-Journal, both citing Associated Press reporting and court proceedings in Nevada, reported that a judge approved a $100 million settlement for Udall’s parents. Those reports said Papillon would pay $24.6 million and Airbus would pay $75.4 million.
The ALM Litigation Daily profile mirrored by Robb & Robb added why the amount drew national attention. That report said VerdictSearch had no higher settlement on file for the wrongful death of a sole decedent. It also said the settlement was reached shortly before trial and without confidentiality, because Philip and Marlene Udall wanted the case to spotlight what they described as a preventable safety problem in older helicopters.
Las Vegas Review-Journal coverage also said the family planned to use some of the recovery to promote helicopter safety and support burn survivor organizations. That follow-up makes the settlement story more than a headline number. It shows how aviation wrongful death cases can push both compensation and safety reform at the same time.
Why Fuel-System Cases Matter in Wrongful Death Litigation
In aviation cases like this, the first impact is only part of the liability analysis. A family may still have a strong wrongful death claim if a design defect, missing safety retrofit, or post-crash fire turned a survivable event into a fatal one. That is why product liability evidence, certification records, retrofit history, and expert testimony often become just as important as the basic accident report.
Context for This Case
Frequently Asked Questions
When a Crash Turns Deadly Because of Fire, the Hardest Legal Questions Start After Impact.
Aviation wrongful death cases can involve product design evidence, corporate safety decisions, delayed rescue issues, and years of technical litigation. If your family is facing questions after a fatal accident, Scranton Law Firm can help you understand your options.
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