
JetBlue Airways is offering to settle a lawsuit filed by two people who were sitting at home when a block of ice that allegedly fell from an aircraft crashed through the roof of their Inglewood home on New Year’s Day in 2024.
In court papers filed Friday with Torrance Superior Court Judge Alan B. Honeycutt, JetBlue lawyers state the proposed accord with two plaintiffs is fair to both sides while also saying the airline could present “compelling defenses to contest liability” if the case goes to trial.
The proposed settlement amount is redacted.
The plaintiffs contend the roof damage was just over $11,000 and that therapy for the two amounted to about $5,600, according to the JetBlue attorneys’ court papers, which additionally state that one plaintiff maintains he lost $84,000 in earnings because he was off work from May 2024 to February 2025.
A hearing on the request for settlement approval is scheduled for Aug. 5.
According to the suit, the plaintiffs were in their home on West 102nd Street and barely escaped injury when at about 8:10 p.m. a large block of ice from a JetBlue aircraft crashed through the roof of their home directly over their bed. The flight originated in New York and was headed to Los Angeles International Airport, the suit states.
An investigation by the Federal Aviation Administration into maintenance and engineering system records for the aircraft revealed a history of potable water issues dating back to July 2023 and that the aircraft was suspected of dropping clear ice on another property in August 2023, according to the suit.
At the time of the October 2024 filing of the suit, the plaintiffs said they no longer felt safe in their own home because of ongoing fear that they may be struck again by falling debris from an aircraft, the suit stated.
In April, an ice block apparently fell from the sky, crashing through the roof of a home in unincorporated Los Angeles County near Whittier and ending up in the living room. Minutes earlier, a resident said he had left the couch for a bedroom. The Federal Aviation Administration was investigating to determine what occurred.



