MEC&F Expert Engineers : Victor Belo, 48, the operator of a fatal Taylor 975 loaded container handler, charged with DWI and death by auto in female dockworker's death at the APM Port Elizabeth terminal

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Victor Belo, 48, the operator of a fatal Taylor 975 loaded container handler, charged with DWI and death by auto in female dockworker's death at the APM Port Elizabeth terminal

Taylor TXLC 975 View through the cab.  Note the visibility through the mast.



Authorities say this TXLC 975 Taylor loaded container handler, a vehicle used to move shipping containers, fatally struck a woman dockworker on Aug. 7. The driver of the top loader has been charged with DWI and death by auto. (Photo by NJ.com user) 



  By Steve Strunsky | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
August 24, 2015

ELIZABETH, NJ


A North Arlington man was drunk when he struck and killed a fellow dockworker this month while they were working at a shipping terminal in Elizabeth.

Victor Belo, 48, faces charges of death by auto and DWI, said Joe Pentangelo, a spokesman for the Port Authority Police.
Victor BeloPAPD

Judy Jones, 49, of Newark, was struck and killed just after 1 p.m., on Aug. 7, while working at the APM Port Elizabeth terminal along Newark Bay.

Belo was driving a top loader, used to move shipping containers around the docks. 

Jones and Belo were both members of the International Longshoremen's Association union, though from separate locals.

The acting Union County prosecutor, Grace Park, issued a statement saying Belo's blood-alcohol level was above the legal limit of .08, though she did not say what his level was. Park said a conviction on the charge of death by auto, a second degree crime, carries a penalty of 5 to 10 years in prison.

Belo's lawyer, Anthony Iacullo, said his client turned himself in this morning at the Union County Prosecutor's office, and was later freed after posting 10 percent of $75,000 bail in cash, set by Superior Court Judge Robert J. Mega. Iacullo said his client is due in court on Aug. 31, when he planned to plead not guilty.

"We look forward to receiving the reports in this matter so that we can prepare our defense," Iacullo said.

Apart the criminal investigation, the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration is looking into whether workplace safety requirements had been met by the company.

Jones was the second woman killed working on local docks in less than four years. Earline Brundage, 47, of Phillipsburg, died in February 2012 after being pinned between two shipping containers at the Port Newark Container Terminal.







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Authorities are investigating the death of a woman dockworker on Friday after she was struck by this front loader at the APM shipping terminal in Elizabeth. The front loader is used to move shipping containers. (Photo by NJ.com user)

 By Steve Strunsky | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
  August 12, 2015

ELIZABETH, NEW JERSEY


The driver of a vehicle that struck and killed a female dockworker in Elizabeth on Friday had been drinking before the accident, and criminal charges are expected to be filed, three sources who were briefed on the incident told NJ Advance Media.

Judy Jones, 49, died shortly after 1 p.m. on Friday, after being struck by a top loader used to move shipping containers at the APM Port Elizabath terminal along Newark Bay. Both the driver and Jones worked for APM, which operates shipping terminals in 38 countries.

Jones, who lived in Newark, bled to death after her leg was severed, said the three sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment on the investigation, and because charges had not yet been filed by the Union County Prosecutor's Office.

The sources identified the operator of the top loader as Victor Belo, a member of the International Longshoremen's Association union who lives in New Jersey. Belo, 48, lives in North Arlington, according to public records.

A spokesman for the Port Authority police, Joe Pentangelo, said the investigation was continuing. A spokesman for the Union County Prosecutor's Office, Mark Spivey, declined to comment.

Pentangelo said the operator of the front loader, who he did not name, was taken to a local hospital following the incident.

"He was very upset at the scene," Pentangelo said.

Belo did not respond to a request for comment. But his lawyer, Anthony Iacullo, confirmed he was representing Belo in the investigation. Iacullo declined to comment on the assertions that his client had been drinking prior to the incident.

"Nothing is really out there yet," Iacullo said, referring to potential criminal charges. 

The victim was also an ILA member, belonging to the union's Local 1233, based in Newark.

Her brother, Wayne Jones, who also lives in Newark, said his sister had been a dock worker for 18 years, and had worked regularly for APM. He said their father had been a longshoreman, and mentored his daughter on the docks.

Jones said the family was frustrated by a lack of official information about what happened or why.

"We haven't heard anything," he said.

Jones was the second woman member of Local 1233 to die on the docks in less than four years. Earline Brundage, 47, of Phillipsburg, died in February 2012 after being pinned between two shipping containers at the Port Newark Container Terminal, in an incident blamed on mechanical failure.

APM's general manager, Brian Clark, released a statement Tuesday saying he and the company were saddened by Jones' death on Friday, and their thoughts were with her family.

"We immediately notified Emergency Responders including the Port Authority Police and OSHA — and then closed our terminal," the statement read. "The accident is under investigation. We take safety very seriously — and are cooperating with authorities in the investigation.

Leni Uddyback-Fortson, a spokeswoman for OSHA, the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said the agency had launched an investigation Friday into whether workplace safety requirements had been met by the company.

She said the agency would issue a report within six months, but declined to comment on any findings so far.



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Authorities investigate a front loader that is used to move shipping containers at the Port of Elizabeth that was involved in a fatal accident that claimed the life of a female dock worker. (Photo by NJ.com user) 



Photo: Facebook.  Investigation. Mc Clester Street Elizabeth, NJ.  APM Terminals






 A typical Top Loader at the APM Terminals

Police are investigating the death of a 40-year-old female dock worker at the Port of Elizabeth this afternoon.




Police responded to the 5000 block of McClester Street at around 1:15 p.m. for a report of a woman with injuries after being struck by a Top Loader.

Emergency crews arrived at the scene and pronounced the woman 40-year-old Judy Jones  dead at the scene.

At this time no details were immediately available as to how the accident occurred, other than that the victim was killed by a Top Loader while she was walking.

Port Authority Police are at the scene investigating.  OSHA will also perform a detailed investigation.

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  By Larry Higgs | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

on August 07, 2015


A woman working at the Port of Elizabeth was struck and killed Friday afternoon by a piece of equipment that moves shipping containers, Port Authority police said.

The accident happened at 1:20 p.m. at the APM Terminal when the 40-year old woman, who was a dock worker, was struck by the top loader while walking, said Joseph Pentangelo, a Port Authority police spokesman.


Emergency Medical personal responded and pronounced her dead at the scene, he said.

It is not known how the accident happened and Port Authority police are investigating the cause, Pentagelo said.

This is a developing story. Check NJ.com for updates.


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Carolina Leid reports a family is demanding answers after a dock worker was killed by a piece of equipment.





A grieving family is demanding answers over the death of a 49-year old New Jersey dock worker, killed Friday when she was hit by a piece of equipment that moves shipping containers.

Judy Jones' three daughters are in agony, mourning the death of their mother, while lost in a maze of questions about her death.

"We want answers but we don't have any answers. That's the disturbing thing," said her brother, Wayne Jones. "It's just hard to get through this moment for all of us."

The Newark grandmother was working at APM Terminal Friday afternoon, a job she had held for 18 years.

"My daughter knew all the safety features because I taught her myself when she started to work there as a longshoreman," her father said. "I can't imagine how she wound up in this predicament with this machine."

"We just don't understand how this accident happened, she knew the safety precautions. She just knew the job," Wayne Jones said.

An APM Terminal spokesperson issued a statement which reads in part, ""We immediately notified Emergency Responders including the Port Authority Police and OSHA - and then closed our terminal. The accident is under investigation. We take safety very seriously - and are cooperating with authorities in the investigation. Our thoughts are with her family at this time and we have pledged our support."

Port Authority police have not charged anyone with a crime, saying the circumstances surrounding Jones' death are being investigated.

"I didn't get to see her or say my last goodbyes to her, which is more disturbing to me," said Wayne Jones.





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