We have followed this incident for the past seven years. Here is the
latest:
An
executive at an aluminium company in the USA when an employee was killed by
falling metal racks was sentenced to five months in prison for his role in
trying to cover up the circumstances surrounding the man’s death.
Former
plant general manager was also fined $20,000 when he was sentenced the third
week of October in federal court in the USA. He will be on three years of
supervised release when he’s released from custody.
The ex-plant
manager pleaded guilty July 11 to a charge of conspiracy to obstruct justice
after initially facing charges that also included obstruction of justice and
obstruction of proceedings, court records show. He was indicted in October
2018.
A
second ex-manager, (name removed) was the safety coordinator and human
resources director at the aluminium company in 2012, will be sentenced next
week, also to a charge of conspiracy to obstruct justice.
The
ex-safety coordinator, who pleaded guilty July 2019, had faced the same charges
as the ex-plant manager plus a charge of making false statements to law
enforcement.
The
charges stemmed from an investigation into the 2012 death of a worker.
The
worker was killed in October 2012, during an incident at the plant when two
metal racks stacked on top of each other, weighing between 4,000 and 5,000
pounds, tipped over onto him and another employee. The two men were pushing the
racks on a roller conveyor system, according to a police report.
The
U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration began its investigation after
the incident in October 2012, and learned of multiple emails concerning safety
issues with the roller system.
The
two managers devised a plan to lie to an OSHA investigator, an indictment
against the pair states. They persuaded employees, by suggesting their jobs
might be in jeopardy, to draft statements recanting previous emails about
safety issues, according to the indictment. Also during an interview with OSHA,
(ex-safety manager) gave false information about safety issues, the indictment
states.
The
aluminium company, which has a parent company in Canada, pleaded guilty in
April 2019 to a charge of misprision of a felony in connection with a
conspiracy to obstruct justice related to the OSHA investigation, according to
the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Misprision is the deliberate concealment of one’s
knowledge of a treasonable act or a felony.
First and foremost we pray that next week that the sentencing of the
ex-safety manager will bring some closure to the deceased worker’s family and
friends. We also pray that the injured worker, (who was severely burned and injured)
has recovered fully.
For the USA this is one of the few incidents where plant management
were held liable for the death of a worker. We do have to acknowledge that the
reason for the prison sentence and monetary fine was not because a worker died
but because the defendants lied to OSHA investigators.
Let’s discuss the sentence. Five months in federal prison means the
defendant will serve time, it is unknown if the defendant will be eligible for early
parole for good behavior. Once released or paroled, must check in with a parole
officer on regular basis, often weekly. A violation of these terms will send
the parolee back to prison. The conviction will be have an effect on future
employment. So even though the amount of incarceration may seem small. The
overall effect of the sentencing on the defendant will have long term
consequences for not only him but his family to. We pray that this case will be
a deterrent for future managers to always correct safety hazards in their
plants.
This incident could have been prevented. How can we make that
statement? Earlier court hearings involved the release of internal emails
stating that the defendants communicating about the conveyor system and stating
that it was a safety issue. For reasons only they know the safety issue was not
corrected and one worker was killed and another worker was severely burned.
On our travels companies will ask us to speak to plant managers
about safety related topics. We will add this incident to our agenda. We pray
that by posting these incidents we can bring awareness and hopefully prevent
recurrence.
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