
Nichelle Nichols’ family wins $13M wrongful death verdict
A New Mexico jury found the hospital and one doctor liable for the Star Trek actress’s 2022 death
A jury has awarded $13 million to the estate of Nichelle Nichols, the actress best known for playing Lt. Uhura on Star Trek, following a wrongful death lawsuit against Gila Regional Medical Center in Silver City, New Mexico. The verdict covers the care Nichols received in 2022 during what turned out to be the final hours of her life.
How the jury split liability
The jury divided responsibility between two parties. Gila Regional Medical Center took 40% of the liability, while one of its physicians took the remaining 60%. A second physician involved in the case was found to bear no liability. The medical center has not publicly responded to the verdict.
What the lawsuit alleged
Nichols had a known heart condition at the time of her final hospital visit. The lawsuit claimed she did not receive proper treatment in the emergency room. After that visit, she was transferred to an assisted living facility, where she died just hours later at the age of 89.
The case drew significant attention both because of Nichols’ cultural standing and because of the circumstances surrounding her final days. Her son had previously raised concerns about her care in the period leading up to her death.
Who Nichelle Nichols was
Nichols made television history in the 1960s when she took on the role of Lt. Uhura in the original Star Trek series. She became the first Black woman to play a starring role in an American television series, and her presence on screen carried weight well beyond science fiction fandom.
She reprised the role across several Star Trek films and built a career in television and film that spanned decades. Her other credits included Heroes, Are We There Yet? and Truckers. Her final screen appearance came in the 2021 documentary Woman in Motion, which told the story of her work with NASA to recruit women and minority candidates for the astronaut program. That effort alone placed her among the more consequential figures in the history of American space exploration.
A legacy that extended past Hollywood
Nichols used her visibility as Uhura to push for change in ways that went far beyond the screen. Her NASA recruitment work in the 1970s helped bring in a generation of astronauts who may never have applied otherwise. For many, that contribution stands alongside her acting career as a defining part of who she was.
The $13 million verdict closes a legal chapter for her family. It does not undo the loss, but it does mark an acknowledgment from a jury that her final care fell short of what she deserved.
SOURCE: Zoom TV




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