NASHVILLE, TN (WSMV) - Two employees of a cement truck company at the center of a Channel 4 I-Team investigation have been indicted on criminal charges.
The I-Team reported earlier this month that the co-founder of Nashville Ready Mix gave a deposition in a civil lawsuit, saying that employees of his own company had known for weeks that the brake system on a truck was faulty.
Two of the employees, driver Robert Ashabrunner and the dispatcher Carlton Mosely, were charged with vehicular and reckless homicide.
Police said Ashabrunner was the driver of the cement truck that hit and killed Sergio Lopez, a father of two. Mosely, who wasn't anywhere near the accident, is also charged.
The indictment reads both men killed Lopez by allowing the operation of a commercial motor vehicle without properly functioning equipment.
"If they'd gotten the brakes fixed, we wouldn't be here today," said Don Meadows, co-founder of Nashville Ready Mix.
In the recorded deposition, Meadows said, "The driver of the truck knew the airbag was busted."
Meadows also said that Mosely knew that the airbags, which control the braking system on the truck, were ruptured and sent the truck out anyway.
"They've known it for three weeks," Meadows said.
Ashabrunner's attorney told the I-Team by phone on Tuesday that Lopez had broken down in the middle of the road in the dark. The attorney said it would have been difficult for any truck, even with perfect brakes, to avoid the crash.
However, Meadows swore under oath that he believed Nashville Ready Mix was responsible for the crash.
"That's the reason I want the truth told," he said.
The I-Team reached out to Mosely's attorney, but have not heard from him yet.
Meadows said in his deposition that other staff members knew of the faulty brake system, but no one else has been indicted.
Copyright 2015 WSMV (Meredith Corporation). All rights reserved.
Cement truck driver & dispatcher charged in deadly crash.
Discussion in 'Trucking Accidents' started by Chinatown, Feb 11, 2015.
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Riprap, Chinatown, "semi" retired and 1 other person Thank this.
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I do believe they meant the pancake. I'm sorry, but you'd have to be a certified idiot to drive a truck with leaking a pancake. They must have had it blocked off, as with a pancake out, the truck won't air up. Nice goin'. And who is hauling cement in the middle of the night? Something doesn't make sense here.
Chinatown and Marksteven Thank this. -
Did I read that right? The co-founder threw the dispatcher and driver under the bus ? Really?
Maybe somebody should tell him the plaintiff is after HIS wallet..... dispatcher and driver don't have sheet SO you nail them and then offer to release for cooperation against the carrier and his insurance.
Regardless, truck should have never left yard.
JMOflood, Marksteven and Chinatown Thank this. -
seems like the cofounder started to look into matters and found out that some of his employees dropped the ball so he just made it easy for the victim to collect on his insurance and if the slackers that caused this mess spend a little time in the penal system maybe the rest of the employees will hang onto the ball in the future
Chinatown and passingthru69 Thank this. -
That is just a bad situation all the way around.
passingthru69 and Chinatown Thank this. -
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If the owner knew about the situation, and did nothing to correct it, he is ever bit as responsible as his employees. The owner has the responsibility to ensure his employees are abiding by the law.
bigdogpile and chalupa Thank this. -
77smartin, tsavory, UKJ and 1 other person Thank this.
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