Over seven years ago the Aluminium
Plant Safety Blog posted a story of a fatal incident at an extrusion plant in
the USA. Since then we have posted follow-up stories involving the
ramifications of the management after the incident occurred. Now we are posting
a recent story of the ramification of the company because of the actions of the
management before and after the incident occurred.
An aluminium extrusion company was
charged with conspiracy to obstruct justice in the investigation surrounding
the death of an employee.
The charges stem from a 2012 accident at the plant where two
metal racks with hot aluminum fell on two employees, killing one worker at the
time, and another worker suffered severe burns.
Two supervisors at the plant were
already individually charged, now the investigation is charging foreign owned aluminium
company as a whole.
Two managers pleaded not guilty
in November. Prosecutors say they were aware of potential dangers regarding the
conveyor system used to move racks in and out of an oven and pressured
employees to provide false statements to an Occupational Safety and Health
Administration investigator after the racks toppled over on the workers.
Investigators say from April 1,
2016, through January 1, 2018, the aluminium extrusion company, through its
employees, concealed felony obstruction of justice offenses from company management
in (foreign country) and further failed to inform law enforcement of the
commission of those offenses.
This case was investigated by the U.S. Department of Labor
This blog’s mantra is not to place blame on the company nor the
worker(s). But the hope that by publicizing these incidents we can prevent
recurrence. With that stated we post this story so that managers and companies
can understand the importance to provide truthful information to government safety
organizations who are investigating an incident.
We do have to acknowledge the family, friends, and former coworkers
of the deceased worker. Because of these never ending stories of the aftermath
of what the aluminium company did or did not do their pain on the loss of their
loved one has not lessened. We know that their pain will never cease but we
hope that overtime they can focus on how their loved one lived not how he died.
The APSB will continue to follow these two judicial cases in regards
to the two managers’ actions, and separately the actions of the aluminium
extrusion company.
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