The trial date for a lawsuit in the Dallas airshow crash that killed six people in 2022 has been postponed.

The jury trial, which was initially slated to begin Tuesday, has been delayed until June 2, 2026, according to online court records.

Two World War II-era aircraft collided mid-air on Nov. 12, 2022, during the Commemorative Air Force’s Wings Over Dallas Airshow at Dallas Executive Airport.

Terry Barker, Leonard “Len” Root, Curtis “Curt” Rowe, Craig Hutain, Dan Ragan and Kevin “K5″ Michels were killed, and a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and Bell P-63 Kingcobra were destroyed.

Breaking News

Get the latest breaking news from North Texas and beyond.

None of the thousands of spectators watching from the ground were injured or killed.

Related:Feds release nearly 2,000 pages of new information related to deadly Dallas air show crash

The trial was set in response to a 14-page lawsuit filed by Root’s family in August 2023.

The 66-year-old retired pilot’s wife, Angela Root, and daughters Larisa Lichte, Kendra Hockaday and Rebekah Lowery filed the suit in Dallas County “to help ensure safety for pilots participating in air shows and to show that the tragic death of a beloved husband and father is an immense loss made even more traumatic by its preventable nature,” according to a written statement from the law firm representing the family.

The lawsuit alleges negligence by the Commemorative Air Force, American Airpower Heritage Flying Museum Inc. and American Airpower Heritage Museum Inc., including not properly monitoring the aircraft and intervening in a timely manner, and failing to establish proper safety management systems or conduct a proper preflight briefing.

The family is seeking more than $1 million in damages.

A report following a two-year investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board has since echoed some of the lawsuit’s allegations, largely blaming the crash on poor planning and inadequate communication, in addition to a lack of administrative planning to address “predictable risks.”

Kevin Koudelka, one of the attorney’s representing Root’s loved ones, told The Dallas Morning News in a phone interview on Monday that the delay was “nothing we didn’t expect,” adding the case’s timeline was dependent on the release of NTSB’s final report.

“The report reaffirmed a lot for us,” Koudelka said. “We think it’s very clear who was at fault, and we will keep pushing forward.”

A lawyer representing the defendants did not immediately respond to a request for comment.