Burns Charest: Class Action by Delta Customers Against CrowdStrike Seeks Damages for Flight Cancellations, Expenses
August 26 2024 - 10:30AM
Business Wire
Documented losses by passengers could reach
millions of dollars
A proposed nationwide class action has been filed against
Austin-based CrowdStrike on behalf of thousands of travelers who
were left stranded and collectively incurred millions of dollars in
losses when a faulty software update caused systemwide outages and
major disruptions to Delta Airlines in late July.
According to the lawsuit, Delta canceled more than 5,000 flights
between the start of the outage on July 19 and July 25.
The litigation was filed this week in federal court in the
Western District of Texas in Austin by Iowa residents Christopher
and Sara Harlan, whose return Delta flight from a vacation in the
Dominican Republic was cancelled. The couple was forced to make
alternative travel arrangements and pay hundreds of dollars in
unreimbursed expenses for hotels and meals before they could return
home.
“We’re fortunate that through the class action system
individuals can collectively litigate and recover losses when
individual lawsuits might not be practical,” says Warren Burns of
Dallas-based Burns Charest LLP, an attorney for the proposed class.
“While other litigation is underway or pending, this filing targets
CrowdStrike and the impact of this massive and avoidable IT outage
on Delta's customers.”
According to the lawsuit, Delta relied heavily on CrowdStrike
for its Windows-based computers and terminals, which crashed and
had to be manually rebooted over several days. Delta could not even
locate many of its flight crews because that information was in the
computers, the lawsuit adds.
“As a result of the failed update, Delta’s passengers still have
unreimbursed losses for missed flights and connections, replacement
flights, other travel costs, hotel bills, meals away from home and
the lost value of concert tickets and other events they missed
because of their canceled flights,” says co-counsel Rob Shelquist
of Lockridge Grindal Nauen PLLP in Minneapolis.
Earlier this month, litigation was filed by passengers over the
alleged failure of Delta to provide full refunds promptly for
cancelled flights. In public statements, the airline has indicated
consideration for bringing its own lawsuit against CrowdStrike.
“We believe that CrowdStrike knew of the dangers of pushing out
an ill-designed and poorly tested software update on a Friday,”
says co-counsel Charles LaDuca of Washington, D.C.-based Cuneo
Gilbert & LaDuca LLP. “This outage was no accident and at the
very least could have been minimized had CrowdStrike acted
responsibly.”
The proposed class action is Harlan v. CrowdStrike Holdings Inc.
and CrowdStrike Inc., No. 1:24-cv-00954, filed in the U.S. District
Court for the Western District of Texas, Austin Division.
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Barry Pound 800-559-4534 barry@androvett.com