The California company receives a probation and fine for two employees who suffocated nitrogen leak in 2020

The California company receives a probation and fine for two employees who suffocated nitrogen leak in 2020
The California company receives a probation and fine for two employees who suffocated nitrogen leak in 2020
View of the south in Soto Street in Vernon, California, an industrial slave directly outside the downtown Los Angeles. [Photo by Downtowngal/Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0]

California Ranch Foods, a food processing plant based in Vernon, guilty of two employees for the death of two employees in the workplace and paid a little more than $ 6 million in a criminal contract last month. The fees come from a nitrogen leak dated December 1, 2020 in a chilled storage room in which the 56-year-old Baldemar Gonsales from Los Angeles and 54-year-old Maria Osynet suffocated.

The district prosecutor's office of Los Angeles, who worked from the investigation of Cal/Osha, concluded the agreement in July. The deal reduces the fees from crime, grants the company for three years of probation and enables it to continue operating continuously.

In addition to a criminal offense of 1 million US dollars, the company will donate 4 million US dollars to local food banks, pay $ 50,000 in Cal/Osha and 1.6 million US dollars for “extended security measures”. These sums, which appear on paper, amount to a minor operating cost for the Golden West Food Group, whose annual sales are estimated at 452 million US dollars.

The criminal punishment follows the families of the victims of a civil lawsuit of 35 million US dollars.

An avoidable death at the workplace

On the morning of the incident, Gonales entered the cooled room after a malfunction had released liquid nitrogen and repressed oxygen. He collapsed almost immediately. An hour later Osyguss, who was not aware of the danger, occurred and suffered the same fate. Neither had flight. The alarm system of the room – its only potential warning – was to be rusted and it could not sound.

Michael Bright, director of the Bureau of Investigations by Cal/Osha, described the company's behavior as a “gross negligence”. The investigators found several outrageous violations: no functioning oxygen monitors, no ventilation for processing a leak, no external legible alley sensors, no equipment for emergency roasts, no proper training of the employee in dealing with compressed gas and no maintenance of the alarm system.

Since then, the company has “retrofitted” its systems to comply with security codes, and an open admission that these measures could and should have existed before two people have lost their lives.

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