
Nashville, Tenn. (AP) – owner of a factory where six workers died last year during the floods Helene, Hurricane, will not face accusations after the Tennessee investigation office has not found any criminal offense. The first prosecutor General Steven Finney announced a decision to conclude a case on Friday and stated that no further measures would be taken.
The investigation did not find that Impact Plastics employees were said to be unable to leave the factory or that they would be released if they left, according to the district representative report. He also found that employees had a little more than an hour during which they could evacuate from Erwin, Tennessee. The conclusion reflects the conclusion of a similar investigation By managing safety and health in Tennessee, which found in April that workers had time to evacuate space, albeit by makeshift routes.
The declaration of Impact Plastics’s legal representative Stephen Ross Johnson said on Friday that the president and founder of Gerald O’Connor welcomes the results of the TBI investigation.
“The truth and the exact facts are now known,” he reads the statement.
Five employees and one a supplier who cleaned offices Once a week he was killed 27. September after being washed away by floods. They were among the 12 people who were stuck near Impact Plastics and waited for the water to retreat after she realized that the exit road had already been immersed. As the water was steadily rising, they climbed to the bed of the giant plastic pipe coil, which were parked outside the factory. When the flood waters eventually overwhelmed the truck, six people were able to use the fleet pipe and were later rescued. The next six drowned.
The Tosha report notes that several Impact Plastics employees escaped the flood. Some were able to go or pass the waterfront on a nearby highway after the workers in the neighboring business dismantled the fence. Others escaped by crossing the temporary journey to the nearby railway line, which the employee in the neighboring business created with a tractor. According to this report, others were able to escape by going to the railway lines.
Although the criminal case is closed, the company still faces an unlawful action of the family’s death Johnny PetersonAnd other civic suits are planned.
Luke Widener, who represents the families of several flood victims, said in his statement that “categorically disagrees that the impact of Plastics employees got some meaningful opportunity to escape. … If the Impact Plastics account were true, Bertha Mendoza, Sibrina Barnett and others who perished with us.”
(Tagstotranslate) Hurricane Helene (T) Impact Plastics (T) Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (T) Uncountable action for death