The Ride the Ducks trial is nearing its end. Attorneys wrapped their closing arguments in front of the jury Friday afternoon.

SEATTLE — Closing arguments ended Friday, signifying the beginning of the end of the Ride the Ducks civil trial in Seattle.

The trial between victims of the crash and the City of Seattle, State of Washington, Ride the Ducks Seattle, and Ride the Ducks International began in early October.

Lawyers for the group of victims painted a picture for the World War II-era vehicles used for tourism with little to no oversight and not enough priority for proper maintenance and safety.

"There's too much fault here, there's too much disaster here, there's too much death and injury here. This was preventable. It should not have happened," said Karen Koehler, a lawyer representing the victims.

Defense attorneys began their closing arguments in front of the jury on Friday morning. The judge gave the case to the jury late in the afternoon, and they'll begin deliberating Monday. It could be some time before they reach a verdict - jurors have months of complicated testimony and evidence to wade through.

Duck boat number six crossed the center line on the Aurora bridge and rammed a tour bus on September 24, 2015. Investigators determined the vehicle’s left front axle snapped.

Five college students died and more than 60 others were hurt.

"The question is not were they injured ... the question is the nature and extent of their injuries," said Jack Snyder, representing Ride the Ducks International.

Attorneys for both Ride the Ducks companies cast blame on each other, and asked the jury to consider each plaintiff's injuries separately - possibly in an attempt to mitigate a large monetary judgement.

"When you award damages, it's not about symbolism," said Patricia Buchanan, representing Ride the Ducks Seattle. "It's about making plaintiffs whole. Being fair, being reasonable."

That axle was the same part that needed strengthening, according to a service bulletin that Ride the Ducks International sent to all duck owners in 2013.

Ride the Ducks Seattle did not heed that warning. Ride the Ducks International implied the blame fell on the local operator. But Ride the Ducks Seattle's attorneys argued International knew of previous breakdowns, and so blame for the defect should lie with them.

"Ride the Ducks (Seattle) didn't know about the first axle fracture in Branson (Missouri)," Buchanan said.

The NTSB previously said reinforcements of the affected part, one that existed on the accident vehicle and a second that was never installed, would not have prevented the axle failure.

Court documents show the same Seattle Ride the Ducks vehicle involved in the deadly crash hit the Aurora bridge three separate times over a two-month period.

Attorneys for the State of Washington and City of Seattle also tried to pin blame for the crash on the duckboat - not the Aurora Bridge.

"I feel like I've said it a million times - there was nothing about the road that caused this mechanical failure, this crash," he said.

Ride the Ducks Seattle has already paid nearly quarter million dollars in fines for dozens of safety violations.

In her closing remarks, Koehler asks jurors to consider the message their verdict sends.

"Let the people that this crash hurt and the families of those that were killed know how bad the damage was done to them," said said. "Fight for them."