A prosecutor says improperly billed brake work had nothing to do with the catastrophic brake failure on a stretch limousine that crashed and killed 20 people in rural upstate New York.
District Attorney Susan Mallery said in a letter filed in Schoharie County Court Wednesday that information from a former repair shop employee doesn’t exonerate limo company operator Nauman Hussain, as the defense claims.
The employee told investigators a brake master cylinder installation and brake flush were billed but not done months before the Oct. 6, 2018 crash in Schoharie. Mallery said neither of those caused the crash.
Mallery said other braking system deficiencies were to blame and would have been discovered through proper inspection and maintenance.
Hussain faces manslaughter and homicide charges. His defense team Wednesday insisted Mavis’s “fraudulent billing practices,” not Hussain, were to blame for the accident.
Related:
- New York Limousine Crash Victims’ Relatives Call for Stronger Regulations
- NTSB Calls for National Safety Standards for Limousines Following New York Crash
- New York Senate Passes New Limo Safety Rules Following Fatal Crash
- Prosecutor Says Limo Company Operator Knew of Vehicle Problems in New York Crash
Topics New York
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Lemonade Books Q4 Net Loss of $21.7M as Customer Count Grows
Insurance Broker Stocks Sink as AI App Sparks Disruption Fears
Trump’s EPA Rollbacks Will Reverberate for ‘Decades’
Florida Insurance Costs 14.5% Lower Than Without Reforms, Report Finds 

