Trucking Firm Won’t Face Criminal Charges in Crash that Killed 5 Georgia Students

By | July 8, 2016

A Georgia prosecutor says he’s dropped the criminal case against a trucking company charged in a deadly interstate crash last year that killed five nursing students.

Tom Durden is district attorney for southeast Georgia’s Atlantic Judicial Circuit. He said Wednesday that he agreed to waive an indictment charging Total Transportation of Mississippi with vehicular homicide and other crimes. Durden says the company in turn is spending $200,000 to establish a nonprofit organization that provides financial aid for nursing students. Durden called the outcome “a lot better than a fine” against the company.

Total Transportation was the employer of John Wayne Johnson, the driver of a tractor-trailer that slammed into stop-and-go traffic on Interstate 16 in April 2015. Five Georgia Southern University nursing students died.

Johnson still faces charges.

Related:

Topics Fraud Georgia Trucking

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Latest Comments

  • July 8, 2016 at 4:41 pm
    Former Status Quo says:
    Agent, Doug is only telling you why it was a possible criminal case and what the auto limits were for the parent company. you need to relax.
  • July 8, 2016 at 3:56 pm
    Agent says:
    Perhaps you should read the article and the headline before commenting and downvoting me. No criminal charges to be filed. Let the insurance companies handle it.
  • July 8, 2016 at 3:10 pm
    Doug Bailey says:
    The parent company is US Express publicly traded company they have the limits to pay the claims, already paid 15,000,000. The company execs where charged based on a GA statue ... read more

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