Case Study
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Driver of Horrific Bus Crash Previously Arrested and Convicted of Manslaughter
By RICHARD ESPOSITO and CINDY E. RODRIGUEZ, March 14, 2011
The driver of the casino gambling tour bus that crashed on a New York highway Saturday, killing 15 people, had a history of driving without a license and other vehicular offenses and served nearly seven years for manslaughter and grand larceny.
Ophadell Williams, also known as Eric Williams, told police a tractor trailer rear-ended the bus, triggering the crash, but according to multiple sources, State Police investigators have repeatedly gone over the truck without finding anything linking it to the crash.
With lack of evidence casting further doubt on the driver’s version of events, National Transportation Safety Board officials said they will again interview him.
Williams has a string of arrests and convictions that included charges in 2003 of aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, driving with a suspended license and unlawful possession of radio devices and police scanners
According to New York State Department of Corrections records, Williams was convicted of manslaughter in April 1992. He served three years in jail, including 361 days before being convicted.
In 1998 he was convicted of grand larceny in Manhattan and served four years in state prison, from April 21, 1998 to May 15, 2002. He had also served 106 days of city jail time on that charge.
A furniture company was found liable for $2.5 million for negligent hiring and retention of a deliveryman who savagely attacked a womancustomer in her home. -Tallahassee Furniture Co., Inc. v. Harrison
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