Government watchdog report: Prosecute rail safety violations
Posted February 26 | Updated February 26
Government watchdog report: Prosecute rail safety violations
The inspector general of the Department of Transportation says federal regulators routinely assess only modest civil fines and, too often, 'criminal penalties aren't being pursued.'
By JOAN LOWY The Associated Press
WASHINGTON Federal regulators are failing to refer serious safety violations involving freight rail shipments of crude oil and other hazardous cargo for criminal prosecution, and are going lightly on civil fines, according to a report released Friday by a government watchdog.
The Federal Railroad Administration routinely applies only modest civil penalties for hazardous materials safety violations, even though inspectors request penalties only for serious or repeated infractions, said the report by the Department of Transportations inspector general. ... Instead, the agencys attorneys have made it a priority to process penalties quickly and avoid legal challenges, the report said.
And, although the agency processes hundreds of safety violations each year, it appears that not a single case has ever been referred for criminal investigation, the report said. After examining a random sample of safety violations over five years, the inspector generals office found 17 cases it said should have been referred for criminal investigation.
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One case the report said should have been referred for criminal investigation involved a company that produced tank car valves that hadnt been put through a required design approval process. The valves subsequently leaked hazardous liquids. In another case, a company may have deliberately failed to disclose that a shipment included radioactive containers.
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Report: Rail hazmat safety violations should be prosecuted