Georgia
Related: About this forumRailroad safety rules raised in trial over film worker death in Georgia
Attorneys accusing a railroad owner of negligence in the death of a movie worker during a 2014 train collision with a trespassing film crew sought Wednesday to use the railroads own safety policies against it.
Sarah Jones, 27, was killed by a freight train that slammed into a film crew shooting Midnight Rider, a movie about the life of singer Gregg Allman. The crash happened on a Georgia railroad bridge where the crew was filming actor William Hurt in a hospital bed placed on the tracks, though owner CSX Transportation had denied permission to production managers.
But a civil lawsuit by Jones parents being tried in Chatham County State Court in Savannah says CSX shares equal blame with production managers who never told Jones and other crew members they were trespassing. They say the railroad should have taken safety precautions to slow the train before the crash Feb. 20, 2014.
Jeffrey Harris, an attorney for Jones family, showed the trial jury Wednesday a policy from CSXs employee rulebook that says train operators must immediately notify a dispatcher of any unauthorized outside party on a track or right of way. The policy also states: Be especially cautious around bridges and tunnels.
Read more: http://evans.allongeorgia.com/railroad-safety-rules-raised-in-trial-over-film-worker-death-in-georgia/
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,969 posts)Full disclosure: I own shares of CSX.
The family is attempting to get money from someone, anyone it can.
About every 3 hours, a person or vehicle is hit by a train.
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Train strikes Allman biopic film crew, woman dead
Video shows terrifying seconds before Georgia film crews fatal run-in with freight train
I was just watching that at another site. I had the same thought.
Get off the tracks. Get off the bridge. Don't worry about the bed.
Midnight Rider Trial: Video Shows Horrifying Moments Before Train Crash
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,969 posts)By RUSS BYNUM, ASSOCIATED PRESS SAVANNAH, Ga. Jul 8, 2017, 9:57 AM ET
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Attorneys for Jacksonville, Florida-based CSX insist the collision wasn't the company's fault. Investigators found CSX had twice denied the "Midnight Rider" filmmakers' requests for permission to shoot on its railroad trestle each time in writing.
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Attorneys for Jones' parents argue Jones and other crew members weren't aware production managers had failed to get permission to shoot on the trestle. They also say the railroad should have known the filmmakers would be in the area. Two trains crossed the same railroad bridge in the hour before the fatal crash. The Jones family's lawyers say video from one train shows crew members on both sides of the tracks, in "close proximity."
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Court filings by CSX attorneys say operators of the two trains that passed the crew before the crash had no legal obligation to alert anyone else. The video shows filmmakers weren't on the tracks or the bridge, but stood on property that doesn't belong to the railroad. CSX says its operators had no duty to assume the crew would put itself in danger.
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An NTSB report on the crash said the probable cause was "the film crew's unauthorized entry onto the CSX Transportation right-of-way ... despite CSX Transportation's repeated denial of permission to access the railroad property."
New development. See GD: Parents of 27-year-old woman killed while filming movie win $11.2-million judgment
TexasTowelie
(116,809 posts)within the past year. A young woman was taking a modeling shoot at a switch junction. She was involved in her shoot that she did not see the train that came from behind her and killed her. I suspect that their will be a huge lawsuit against the railroad compny even though they weren't in the least way negligent or liable.