What Big Pistons said, yes.
Only point I see as necessary to add is that plaintiffs' attorneys, if they are to stand even a slight chance against the Big-Law machines that represent corporate defendants particularly in litigation with massive reach like this case, need resources to carry the fight. The plaintiffs have the burden of proof. Fulfilling it, and doing so against Big-Law (and its connectedness sometimes), requires resources. I won't drift the thread (more) relating about "litigation reform" and "loser pays lawyer fees" initiatives - the resources to fight the depths of Boeing's pockets had to be on hand at the start and had to come from someplace along the attorneys' prior engagements.