The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA) today confirmed the agency’s investigation of the
Center City building collapse that left six people dead and injured 13 others
has concluded, with no additional fines being levied against any of the other
entities involved in the collapse, including the Salvation Army.
During the five month long investigation, OSHA interviewed
and took oral depositions from numerous people involved in the collapse, but
only two, Griffin Campbell and Sean Benschop were penalized by the agency.
OSHA cited Campbell and Benschop last month, and applied
maximum fines -- a $313,000 penalty for Griffin Campbell and Campbell
Construction, and a $84,000 penalty for Sean Benschop and S&R Contracting
-- for a number of egregious and willful violations found prior to the June 5
collapse. The violations included a failure to demolish the building from the
top down and leaving an unsupported wall more than one story high.
Attorney Robert Mongeluzzi, who is handling several civil
lawsuits related to the building collapse, said he was not surprised by OSHA’s
decision not to penalize other parties involved in the collapse including, The
Salvation Army or developer Richard Basciano and his company STB Investments.
“OSHA would not have jurisdiction to cite The Salvation Army
since they weren’t doing construction at the site. The building owner did not
have employees on the site at the time of the collapse; OSHA also would not
have jurisdiction to cite them. So it does not surprise us that OSHA did not
cite them,” Mongeluzzi said.
“What we should not forget is that whether OSHA cites or
does not cite is inadmissible in any court and is irrelevant to whether or not
any parties involved are innocent.”
Campbell's construction company was hired to demolish the
four-story building at 2136 Market Street, where on the morning of June 5, the
building's western wall collapsed into a Salvation Army thrift store burying
its occupants in rubble.
According to investigators with the Philadelphia District
Attorney's Office, an excavator operator working for Campbell, Sean Benschop
a.k.a. Kary Roberts, was allegedly high on drugs while operating heavy
machinery on the demolition site. Benschop is currently behind bars and faces
six counts of involuntary manslaughter and 13 counts of reckless endangerment.
OSHA says the fines against Campbell and Benschop were based
on an inspection that was initiated prior to the collapse, on May 15.
According to OSHA, both companies were given 15 days to
respond to the citations. S&R Construction contested the citations shortly
after they were issued, on Nov. 21; and Campbell Construction filed to contest
the citations on Dec. 4.
Source: NBC10.com
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