I keep posting about this trend as it comes up in the news articles I get while at work: People who bring lawsuits against the deepest pockets available for events that were completely out of their control.
In this case, three women, aged 19 and 20, brought alcohol to the pre-concert festivities at Gillette Stadium, got drunk, then left the stadium, where he driver proceeded to go off the road less than a mile away, hit a tree, and kill herself and one passenger and injure the other.
The family of the driver is not suing, but the families of the two passengers are both doing so.
However, rather than sue the family of the woman responsible for the accident, they're going after the Kraft Group, which owns the stadium, claiming that it is somehow their fault that they allowed barely-underage girls to consume alcohol that they or other visitors had brought themselves in the parking lot and then proceed to engage in driving while under the influence.
While I agree that the site should have verified that people entering the lot had tickets, it is not their job to enforce whether or not people bringing their own alcohol onto the premises are of age. And, while I also agree that turfing the tresspassers who were partying without tickets to the event contributed to the circumstances that led to the accident, it is also not the site's duty to ensure that the drivers were not intoxicated.
The three girls (and potentially whoever supplied them with alcohol) are the culpable parties, but as the girls themselves don't have any money and the providers of the drink are not findable, the site itself becomes the target of the cash grab.
It is terrible that the accident happened, but the people in the car were the architects of their own circumstances and a third party should not be held liable and made to pay for someone else's mistakes.
Article at the Boston Globe
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In this case, three women, aged 19 and 20, brought alcohol to the pre-concert festivities at Gillette Stadium, got drunk, then left the stadium, where he driver proceeded to go off the road less than a mile away, hit a tree, and kill herself and one passenger and injure the other.
The family of the driver is not suing, but the families of the two passengers are both doing so.
However, rather than sue the family of the woman responsible for the accident, they're going after the Kraft Group, which owns the stadium, claiming that it is somehow their fault that they allowed barely-underage girls to consume alcohol that they or other visitors had brought themselves in the parking lot and then proceed to engage in driving while under the influence.
While I agree that the site should have verified that people entering the lot had tickets, it is not their job to enforce whether or not people bringing their own alcohol onto the premises are of age. And, while I also agree that turfing the tresspassers who were partying without tickets to the event contributed to the circumstances that led to the accident, it is also not the site's duty to ensure that the drivers were not intoxicated.
The three girls (and potentially whoever supplied them with alcohol) are the culpable parties, but as the girls themselves don't have any money and the providers of the drink are not findable, the site itself becomes the target of the cash grab.
It is terrible that the accident happened, but the people in the car were the architects of their own circumstances and a third party should not be held liable and made to pay for someone else's mistakes.
Article at the Boston Globe
^-.-^
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