Gaby Assouline’s family filing suit against Southwest
The family of a disabled Florida woman who died Sunday after falling down a Southwest Airlines jetway last year is filing a wrongful death suit against the company, The Post has learned.
Gaby Assouline, 25, who suffered from a genetic muscle disorder, was “thrown” from her wheelchair after employees allegedly refused to help push her down a gateway bridge after she requested aid.
Assouline landed on her head, causing severe injuries that left her paralyzed from the neck down, according to her shattered relatives, and after 11 bedridden months in a hospital, she passed away on Sunday.
“What was a negligence case will now become a wrongful death suit,” her attorney Robert Solomon told The Post Thursday. “Gaby did everything right here, and now the family is mourning her death.”
Assouline was traveling from the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Florida to see her sister in Denver last February when the tragedy occurred.
Her parents had previously sued Southwest for negligence, hoping to recoup costs associated with Assouline’s multi-million dollar medical bill and other costs related to the injury. The attorney said he is now amending that suit and resubmitting it.
Expecting her to eventually return home, her mother, Sandra Assouline, had spent sizable sums of money to prepare her residence to accommodate Gaby’s special needs, Solomon said.
The lawyer added the airline has maintained Assouline declined help, and that they are not at fault in the case.
“Southwest has crossed their arms and are blaming Gaby,” he said. “She fought for 11 months. Her family fought for 11 months. Now I’m going to fight on their behalf.”
Solomon asserted that staffing shortfalls and scheduling issues at the airline led to their inability to accommodate Assouline’s request.
“You have a family that was fulling expecting her to come home,” he said. “But there were complications, and now they are sitting shiva.”
The airline addressed Assouline’s death in a statement this week.
“Southwest offers its sincere condolences to Ms. Assouline’s family, friends and all whose lives she touched,” it read. “We have a more than 51-year commitment to caring for our People and Customers and remain engaged with the parties involved.”
The airline did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the wrongful death suit.
Solomon said he expects depositions to begin shortly, along with an inspection of the area in the airport where the accident occurred.
“Gaby was a meticulous woman, a college graduate,” he said. “She had the trip planned out, along with her mother. It was her first time flying alone. This should have never happened.”
Her mother, Sandra Assouline said after the accident her daughter was cognizant of her condition.
“The fear and pain she is showing in her eyes when she wakes up in those brief moments of clarity is too much to bear,” her mom said at the time.
A GoFundMe page for Assouline has so far raised more than $137,000 as of Thursday.