Listed below are the New York Times
articles regarding railroad evidence destruction. The
railroads were sanctioned by various federal and state
courts for destroying evidence in connection with crossing
accident lawsuits.
It is crucial that an injured railroad
employee and his coworkers take all steps to preserve
any relevant evidence. DO NOT TRUST THE RAILROAD TO
PRESERVE EVIDENCE FOR YOU. If you are injured, the railroad
will immediately begin working to reduce the value of
your claim.
The articles are available as Adobe
Acrobat documents (.pdf format). You can view photographs
and the entire series of NY Times articles at the "Death
on the Tracks" website.
In
Deaths at Rail Crossings, Missing Evidence and Silence
By WALT BOGDANICH, Jenny Nordberg contributed reporting
for this article. Tom Torok contributed data analysis
and reporting. Eric Koli contributed reporting from
San Francisco.
Some railroads sidestep their responsibility in fatalities
caused by crossing accidents, a seven-month Times investigation
has found. (July 11, 2004)
A
Crossing Crash Unreported and a Family Broken by Grief
By WALT BOGDANICH, Jenny Nordberg contributed reporting
for this article. Eric Koli contributed research
In 1997, Hilary Feaster was killed at a railroad crossing.
Two boys were killed at the same crossing four years
before, but the railroad had never reported the accident.
(July 12, 2004)
Amtrak
Pays Millions for Others' Fatal Errors
By WALT BOGDANICH, Claire Hoffman, Eric Koli and Jenny
Nordberg contributed reporting for this article
In accident after accident, freight railroads have used
Amtrak to shield themselves from tens of millions of
dollars in liability. (Oct. 15, 2004)
For
Railroads and the Safety Overseer, Close Ties
By WALT BOGDANICH, Jenny Nordberg contributed reporting
for this article
Has a close relationship to the railroad industry dulled
the Federal Railroad Administration's enforcement edge?
(Nov. 7, 2004)
Safety
Group Closely Echoes Rail Industry
By WALT BOGDANICH, Jenny Nordberg and Eric Koli contributed
reporting for this article
Documents show that the nation's most influential rail-safety
group is tightly bound to the railroad industry. (Nov.
14, 2004)
Questions
Raised on Warnings at Rail Crossings
By WALT BOGDANICH, Jenny Nordberg, Jo Craven McGinty
and Tom Torok contributed reporting for this article
An examination of reported signal malfunctions in the
railroad industry indicates that they may constitute
a wide problem.(Dec. 30, 2004)
Oversight
Is Spotty on Rail-Crossing Safety Projects
By WALT BOGDANICH and JENNY NORDBERG
When Missouri state auditors set out to learn if railroads
were prudently spending government money to install
warning signals, they found more than a few problems.(Feb.
18, 2005) |