Posted on 09/01/2006 11:35:58 AM PDT by Zuben Elgenubi
<<<<< ping >>>>>
I was going to ask, have they even buried her yet?
It would only be news if they didn't sue.
Wow. What a surprise.
U.S. attorney adds to warning about contacting crash families (Paper runs lawyer ad after crash)
I'd think it be tough to make funeral arrangements and meet with your attorneys at the smae time.
"instrumentality? Booby Wombles?
I got to go look for a picture of this lawyer.
According to the Lexington Herald, a memorial is scheduled for next Monday
Rebecca Adams had been working for Intergraph Corp. for only a year. But she made an impact on the Huntsville, Ala.-based company, which lowered its flag to half-staff Monday in her honor.
Adams was heading to Elk Grove, Calif., on a business trip Sunday when Comair Flight 5191 crashed as it took off from Blue Grass Airport.
"You would not believe the number of calls and e-mails coming in -- she was loved by clients and associates alike," said her boyfriend, Parham Baker of Lexington. "She had incredible friends from all over the country that will be flying in for her services."
Adams, 47, was a senior project manager for Intergraph and lived in Harrodsburg. She was born in Indiana, and lived in Virginia and New York before returning to Lexington.
She leaves behind her grown children, Josh, Chris and Lauren, all of Lexington. Baker said Adams typically logged 70- to 80-hour work weeks, but enjoyed hiking and tending to her farm in Mercer County.
When asked what he will miss most about Adams, Baker responded: "her."
"She was just a wonderful and fun and loving person," he said.
The family has tentatively planned a memorial service for Adams on Monday in Lexington.
Because death happens to everyone. Is anyone truly surprised?
It is a human's lot in life to die and then to be judged.
Oppps Booby=Bobby
oh crud...
What, the families of those lost shouldn't sue?
Bobby G. Wombles
Address: | 201 W. Vine St. Lexington, KY 40507-1613 Map & Directions |
Phone: | (606) 255-9004 |
Fax: | (606) 255-9005 |
E-mail: |
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I'm not suggesting that in the least.
Okay.
Kind of hard to tell where the priorities lie. </sarcasm>
CHA-CHING!
The new American Dream: Hope some relative you only visit on holidays and birthdays dies in some horrible accident, so you can play the sobbing victim as you cry your way to the bank.
This is usually the case in such lawsuits as this. The person was barely known or cared about until linked to some horrible tragedy. Maybe she was truly loved, and missed. If so, is it really honoring her memory to initiate a lawsuit before she's even in the ground?
In any event, it won't be an easy way to achieve closure, to be involved in and working on a lawsuit that could take many months, if not years to resolve. If it were me in that situation, I'd take whatever offer the airline offered and be done with it. After all, it's not like there is any great injustice to be corrected here; this isn't like the car manufacturer that purposely hid a glitch in its safety devices, so as to save the cost of a recall.
Sometimes accidents are correctly called just that, "accidents", for a reason.
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