Passage of Time Hampers Investigation of West Virginia Mining Accident
A West Virginia official says the passage of time makes it impossible to determine what caused a fatal 2005 coal truck crash.
Administrator Terry Farley said May 14 the Office of Miners’ Health, Safety and Training was hampered because it didn’t start investigating until 2007. By then, Farley says there was no way to consider factors such as mechanical problems because the truck was no longer available.
The state’s accident report is limited to facts such as road conditions and the experience of 25-year-old driver Chad Cook, who died in the Nov. 8, 2005, wreck.
Cook’s death was reclassified as a mining accident last year after regulators determined it occurred on a mine road near the Grant-Tucker county line, not on a public highway as originally thought.
- LA County Told to Pause $4B in Abuse Payouts as DA Probes Fraud Claims
- Credit Suisse Nazi Probe Reveals Fresh SS Ties, Senator Says
- Charges Dropped Against ‘Poster Boy’ Contractor Accused of Insurance Fraud
- Tesla Sued Over Crash That Trapped, Killed Massachusetts Driver
- Nationwide Spending $100M on AI to Beef up Claims Efficiency, Customer Experience
- Capital One $425M Depositor Settlement Wins Preliminary Approval
- Adjusters Launch ‘CarFax for Insurance Claims’ to Vet Carriers’ Damage Estimates
- Allianz Built An AI Agent to Train Claims Professionals in Virtual Reality