NEW YORK (AP) — A construction crane owner who was acquitted
of manslaughter in a collapse that killed two workers is now facing a civil
wrongful death trial over the accident, which helped spur new safety measures.
The slain workers' families are suing crane owner James
Lomma, his company and others involved in a Manhattan high-rise construction
site where a crane snapped apart in May 2008. In opening statements Friday,
lawyers for the families lambasted Lomma, whose 2012 acquittal they saw as a
blow.
"Cranes are not supposed to fall from the sky,"
said Bernadette Panzella, who represents crane operator Donald C. Leo's family.
"James F. Lomma didn't do what he was supposed to do."
Defense openings are due Tuesday. Lomma's lawyers have
indicated they may suggest that Leo's handling of the crane contributed to the
collapse, echoing his defense at his criminal trial.
The families' lawyers say that Lomma allowed a cheap, shoddy
repair to a critical crane part and that the fix failed and sparked the
collapse. Top portions of the 200-foot-tall rig snapped off and plummeted to
the ground, killing Leo, 30, and crushing to death sewer company worker Ramadan
Kurtaj, 27.
Prosecutors made — and jurors rejected — a similar argument
at Lomma's 2012 criminal trial. There, Lomma's lawyers said he got the repair
done and inspected responsibly. They also argued that Leo made mistakes that
destabilized the crane, a theory his family called offensive.
The legal bar for proving a criminal case is higher than for
holding someone liable in civil court. Civil courts also can apportion blame
among different parties, including the plaintiff.
Before Lomma was acquitted, mechanic Tibor Varganyi, who had
arranged the repair, pleaded guilty to criminally negligent homicide. Varganyi was
sentenced to a year of community service.
The collapse happened two months after another crane topped
elsewhere in Manhattan and killed seven people. The accidents prompted scrutiny
of crane safety and a host of new crane rules.
Source: Times
Union
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