A jury has found Jefferson Parish government negligent in the way it drafted and enacted a plan that evacuated drainage pump operators on the eve of Hurricane Katrina’s landfall in Louisiana but ruled the parish was not responsible for subsequent flooding and that former parish President Aaron Broussard’s actions did not rise to the level of willful misconduct.
The complex class-action civil verdict came after 71/2 hours of deliberation.
Plaintiffs’ attorneys have estimated that 40,000 properties flooded in Jefferson Parish during Katrina.
The Times-Picayune reports the verdict means the question of monetary damages must be addressed. It’s unclear how the case will move forward, but attorneys say several trials, called “flights,” would likely be held, each with separate juries that would decide damages in batches.
Topics Catastrophe Natural Disasters Flood Louisiana Hurricane
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Progressive Now 4th Largest Global Insurer; RenRe Fastest Growing in ’24
Catastrophe Bond Investors Told to Brace for Jamaica Payout
France Makes New Arrests in Louvre Heist; Jewels Still Not Found
CyberCube: Insured Loss Estimate From AWS Outage Likely About $40M 

