SANTO DOMINGO – Grieving families of the Jet Set disaster victims have initiated landmark legal proceedings against the Dominican government, alleging systemic administrative failures that exacerbated one of the nation’s deadliest urban tragedies. The civil lawsuit, formally submitted on January 29, 2025, targets the Dominican State, the National District City Council, and former Housing Minister Carlos Bonilla for their purported roles in the catastrophic incident.
The litigation seeks approximately RD$2 billion in comprehensive damages, comprising RD$909.9 million for material losses and RD$1.07 billion for moral reparations. The plaintiffs contend that governmental negligence directly enabled the circumstances that claimed nine lives and left one survivor with injuries. Notably absent from the defendants is current Mayor Carolina Mejía, as legal accountability has been assigned to the late Christian Alejandro Tejada Pichardo, former Urban Planning director who perished in the tragedy.
Juridically anchored in the Administrative Litigation Jurisdiction, the claim methodically references prosecutorial investigations confirming the State’s violation of multiple regulatory frameworks. The families have explicitly challenged President Luis Abinader’s characterization of a ‘legal loophole,’ maintaining that existing statutes provided unambiguous oversight mandates. The filing further condemns the administration’s failure to implement promised investigative commissions and highlights the absence of substantive support systems for the 236 bereaved families and over 100 injured survivors.
The plaintiffs – representing victims César Augusto López, Deneska Shalimar Pérez, Nathalie Miledys Guerrero, Joselyn Rosado Baldera, Dahiana Patiño Martínez, Ruth Elisa Seija, Daniela Henríquez Joshua, Aracelis Rodríguez, and Héctor Eduardo Brito Peña – seek not only financial compensation but also judicial recognition of institutional accountability in preventing future urban governance failures.
