Where did it say his books were fudged? The way I read that, he was "cited" because his truck wasn't a full 15 feet from the roadway and was technically supposed to be "on duty" (am I right?). Because of a stupid technicality, this guy gets **** thrown at him. That's not right. He was parked on his own private property.
He should have countersued the family of the drunk for property damage and trespassing.
Paperless logs
Discussion in 'Motor Carrier Questions - The Inside Scoop' started by Road Dog, Sep 24, 2006.
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Hey Turbo, I thought that first guy ran over his hours to get home, and that's what they hung him on.
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My roommate was talking to a Swift driver yesterday. She says that Swift is going to the paperless logs starting the first of the year. I guess Swift is feeling some heat from their poor safety record and are trying to 'clean it up' a little by forcing their drivers to be compliant. I think forcing the planning departments and dispatchers to be compliant in their dispatching would make more sense, but this is easier.
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My friend's logbook clearly implicated him to being someplace where he should not have been. He was legally supposed to take a rest break two hours prior to getting home, and was not supposed to have been there for another five hours. The truck was just a foot from being legally parked off of the roadway, and the bumper was totally non-protective, which came down on the company. It bankrupted them.
Here's another, although I know people might be tired of cases, but some of you may remember the fog pile-up near Ringgold, Georgia on March 14, 2002. Two trucks on the northbound side collided, which started the chain reaction. Minutes later, 125 vehicles were involved, and 5 people died.
What you will not find widely mentioned, is what happened to those two drivers. One, was found when the investigation was completed, to be slightly over on his ten hour driving limit. The second, was found to be horribly over on his 70 hour limit, and had falsified his logbook for all of his previous 8 days.
The driver who wit the ten hour violation, was fined $1,500, and the other driver was fined $5,000. Both were fired by their respective companies, not too long after they notified them of the wreck.
USATODAY.com - Pileup on foggy Georgia road kills at least 5
The "you weren't supposed to be there at the time this happened" charge is a very common point that is being used to bilk companies, and the drivers themselves out of millions of dollars. And it works too. Juries have practically went along with it in almost every case it is used. -
What ate him alive, was the civil lawsuit that he had to fight. It was the Attorney fees that caused him the loss of his house. The dead man's family didn't receive very much at all. The carrier bankrupted and walked away from the entire thing. He (the driver) had little left, after the Lawyer finished claiming his fees.
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Depending on how their system will be set up, they may well be notified at the moment a driver steps over the HOS line, and if that's the case, and the dispatcher fails to react, and something goes wrong, like a fatal accident, that dispatcher will have some 'splainin' to do. -
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I guess I don't understand why the driver lost his house. Isn't it possible to claim bankruptcy like the company to avoid this??
Good Lord, if OJ Simpson can get away with it... -
Truth be known, it may well be that his own Attorney screwed him, but I don't have any way of knowing this for sure. The Attorney did receive the most out of all of this, for his representation. And the driver did eventually bankrupt, but you know darn well that the Attorney wasn't going to walk away with nothing.
And we're not talking about a very expensive home here either. I don't think it would have sold for much more than $75,000.
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