MEC&F Expert Engineers : 11/02/17

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Worker Derek Mesenbring, 31, died after he was exposed to methyl bromide at Industrial Fumigant Co., a Chicago Ridge chemical plant







Bourbonnais Man Dies From Possible Pesticide Exposure In Chicago Ridge

Chicago Ridge police and OSHA investigating chemical company after Bourbonnais man dies of possible exposure to methyl bromide.
 

By Lorraine Swanson (Patch Staff) - 

Updated Oct 26, 2017 12:26 am ET




CHICAGO RIDGE, IL -- A Bourbonnais man died after he was exposed to methyl bromide at a Chicago Ridge chemical plant. Derek Mesenbring, 31, was at work when he began feeling ill on Monday afternoon. He was taken to Palos Community Hospital, where he passed away early the next morning. An autopsy is pending at the Cook County Medical Examiner's office.

Around 4:32 p.m. Monday, Mesenbring's wife called the Chicago Ridge Police Department and asked them to check up on her husband at Industrial Fumigant Co., a company that provides pest management and sanitation solution services. Police said the wife had spoken to her husband earlier, who complained he wasn't feeling well.

When officers arrived at 6663 99th St, Chicago Ridge, they saw Mesenbring's car parked in the lot. The building was also secured. Officers were able to get into the building, where they found Mesenbring in distress, police said in a news release. The man was taken to Palos Community Hospital in Palos Hills,

The hospital went on a hazmat watch after learning that the Bourbonnais man had been exposed to insecticide. Chicago Ridge's police officers and fire personnel were sent back to the hospital for evaluations for the possible exposure to the chemical. Police said the first responders did not show any signs of toxic exposure.

Methyl bromide is an airborne toxicant. Once ventilated, it no longer poses a threat. The Chicago Ridge Fire Department ventilated the building and it returned to a safe level. Chicago Ridge police are cooperating with OSHA in an ongoing investigation.

Demolition workers without proper fire-safety training started and accidentally spread the fire that raged for several hours at an abandoned Georgia-Pacific plywood mill in south Arkansas this weekend





Fire at plywood mill blamed on errors

By Emily Walkenhorst

Posted: November 2, 2017 at 1:01 a.m.


Demolition workers without proper fire-safety training started and accidentally spread the fire that raged for several hours at an abandoned plywood mill in south Arkansas this weekend, Crossett Fire Chief Bo Higginbotham said Tuesday.

Debris from the fire, which included insulation from the mill’s roof, remained spread across parts of Crossett on Tuesday afternoon, three days after the blaze.

Crews have been picking up insulation since Saturday afternoon, said Jennifer King, a spokesman for Georgia-Pacific, which owns the mill. Much of the insulation was caught in trees and has been blown by the wind onto the ground, she said.

The fire started about 9:30 a.m. Saturday before being contained by 4 p.m. and then put out, according to a report from the Crossett Fire Department. The fire prompted a response from numerous departments, the closure of U.S. 82 and the evacuation of nearby businesses.

On Tuesday, officials ended their investigation of the cause of the fire at the mill, which has not been in operation since 2011 and was being torn down.

On Saturday morning, workers for Houston-based GSD Cos., Georgia-Pacific’s demolition contractor, were using cutting torches and ignited a pile of wood debris, Higginbotham said. They then took a 500-gallon water tank that was on site and sprayed directly at the fire, extinguishing the flames that were directly hit with the water but pushing away the flames that were not, Higginbotham said.

“Usually if you spray directly into the fire, just a straight shot, it’ll put what you hit out, but kind of like wind, it will blow the rest of away,” he said.

That spread the fire toward old mill equipment with residual hydraulic fluid on it, he said. That’s an oily fluid, which caused the fire to spread onto roof timbers, he said.

GSD officials did not return phone messages Tuesday afternoon.

King said Georgia-Pacific began its own investigation of the fire Tuesday morning and that the company was not reconsidering its partnership with GSD.

Employees were inside the mill and exposed to the flames for about a minute before they exited the building and called the Fire Department, Higginbotham said.

The workers were untrained in fire safety, Higginbotham said, which is why they did not know not to spray water directly on a fire. Management also failed to acknowledge the hazards of using torches and grinders, which spark, in a wood-frame structure, he said.

Before the fire, Higginbotham learned that GSD had shut off access to water in the facility as a part of the demolition process. He said he asked company officials to turn the water back on, but they declined. He said he was assured that workers would be able to turn the water back on in the event of an emergency, but they were not, he said.

Higginbotham did not know why they were unable to, but he said having water in the building would have reduced the severity of the accident.

“It would have put the fire out right away, because they had sprinkler systems out there,” he said.

On social media, people in the Crossett area reported having trouble breathing during the fire and seeing debris end up on their lawns.

The Crossett Fire Department warned residents the fire was toxic, which Higginbotham said was a reference to the general toxicity of all fires.

The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration said Monday that it had opened an inquiry into the fire, looking for anything that might have contaminated workers.

On Tuesday, OSHA area director Carlos Reynolds said he had asked GSD to conduct the investigation.

When asked whether companies investigating themselves was standard procedure, an OSHA spokesman referred the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette to a description of work-site incident investigations on OSHA’s website.

During an investigation, a company would look at what procedures were and weren’t followed and why, according to the description. Internal investigations enable “employers and workers to identify and implement the corrective actions necessary to prevent future incidents.”

The inquiry was the result of a nonformal complaint, which in this case was OSHA officials seeing a report of the fire in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. A formal complaint is when an employee reports the incident to OSHA.

The Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency sent workers to the site.

The Department of Environmental Quality did not send air monitors to the site to gauge pollution because the mill was not a chemical plant, said Stuart Spencer, associate director in charge of the office of air quality.

The EPA did not return a phone message left at the agency Tuesday afternoon.

The fire prompted a response from numerous departments, the closure of U.S. 82 and the evacuation of nearby businesses.

OSHA fines Alta Construction $106,470 because it placed its employees in danger by failing to follow safe trenching practices at theParcel B/Pioneer Crossing development in Downtown Boise, ID




Contractor fined $106K for putting Downtown Boise workers in danger


By Audrey Dutton
adutton@idahostatesman.com

November 2, 2017

A construction firm hired to work on the Parcel B/Pioneer Crossing development in Downtown Boise has been cited for breaking worker safety laws.

The $65 million project spans the five acres between 11th and 13th streets and Myrtle and Front streets. It includes a 644-space parking garage and other buildings currently under construction.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration said Wednesday that Boise company Alta Construction placed its employees in danger by failing to follow safe trenching practices at the work site.

The company was cited with willful and serious violations of worker safety laws. OSHA is proposing a $106,470 fine. The lion’s share of the fine is for the “willful” violation.

A willful violation is when “an employer has demonstrated either an intentional disregard for the requirements of the [worker safety law] or a plain indifference to employee safety and health,” according to OSHA. The agency would not elaborate on how this incident met that definition as the citation may still be appealed.


Inspectors for the agency went out to Alta’s work site along Myrtle Avenue between 11th and 12 streets on May 3, after receiving two complaints of unsafe trenching operations. (Alta was issued a permit that day for work on the Parcel B parking garage project.) OSHA inspectors found employees working inside a 7-foot-deep trench without any cave-in protection to keep them safe if the trench collapsed.

The trench also did not have a stairway, ladder, ramp or other safe way of getting out of the trench.

“Fortunately no one was injured, but it is imperative that companies use protective systems in trenches to keep their workers safe,” local OSHA director David Kearns said.

Two men were killed and one injured after a trench collapsed in Northwest Boise last year.

“After the May 2016 trench collapse deaths, we’ve heard from many in the construction field locally who said it was a ‘wake up call’ for them,” Kearns said.

Any trench that is more than 5 feet deep is required to have cave-in protection such as a trench box.

Alta officials did not immediately respond to a message from the Idaho Statesman.

OSHA’s citation is not final. By Thursday morning, Alta had already scheduled an informal conference with OSHA to talk about the violations. Alta also may appeal OSHA’s findings to an independent review commission.

=======================


‘Woefully inadequate’ brace wasn’t in place before fatal trench collapse

October 04, 2016 11:10 AM

‘I WASN’T SURPRISED’

News of the tragedy shocked excavation crews around the Treasure Valley. Angel Perez, a foreman for Wood Brothers Trucking and Construction in Boise, said he knew the man who survived the collapse. 

“When I went to see him, I was almost tearing up,” he said.
Perez said he wasn’t surprised the collapse happened, “but I was surprised at how long it took.” 

He said he worked for Hard Rock between the early 2000s and 2011. He said he quit, in part, because Callister often refused to provide safety measures such as trench boxes.

“He didn’t want to rent them,” Perez said. “He’s like, ‘Oh, just get it done quick and then just move on.’ Or where we would get deep into a water table, he didn’t want to rent pumps to pump water out and work safely.”
Right away, I put on the schedule: ‘Meeting. Mandatory meeting. Safety meeting, 8 a.m.’ And everybody was here. 

Angel Perez, foreman for Wood Brothers Construction
Callister, who was a financial partner in Hard Rock when Perez worked there but didn’t oversee operations at that point, said that accusation is “grossly inaccurate.” He said Hard Rock did own trench boxes and water pumps. Perez, he said, left the company under bad terms after violating a non-compete agreement.

“What you’ve got is a guy who’s got an axe to grind,” Callister said. “His comments are not based on our policies.”

Callister said he wasn’t at the trench site when it collapsed, but he showed up shortly afterward. 

“It's just a stunning loss,” he said.

I feel tremendously responsible. It hit all of us, because obviously, the first thing we think of is, 'What could we have done different?' That's what haunts anybody when a tragedy occurs.

Hard Rock Construction owner Dave Callister

AFTERMATH

Callister said his company is in regular contact with the worker who survived and Smith’s wife.

“We’re greatly concerned about her,” he said. “She has a tremendous burden. She’s with child. She’s not that far from giving birth. The workers comp hasn’t settled with her, which makes me furious. And we’ve been supporting her and taking care of her.”

Kearns said Hard Rock’s fine amount is unusually high because OSHA investigators classified the failure to provide adequate protection as “willful.” That means Hard Rock was either “plainly indifferent” or showed “intentional disregard” for their workers’ safety, Kearns said. 

Hard Rock has three weeks to pay its fines, ask for an informal conference to reduce its penalties or appeal the citation to a judge, Kearns said.

The agency soon will turn over its findings to the U.S. Attorney’s Office as it does in cases that involve willful violations that lead to deaths, he said. But criminal charges are against negligent companies are rare, and OSHA has no control over licensing. 

“We don't have the ability to ever shut down a business,” he said. “It basically requires a court order from a judge to stop any business activities.”

Callister said none of the victims nor family members have filed a legal claim against his company.

General contractor ESI put on the fall prevention training workshop with OSHA for a group of 200 to 300 ESI construction workers and ESI subcontractors in Boise, Idaho. The hour-long training included demonstrations about workplace falls and how life-threatening those falls can be.

Read more here: http://www.idahostatesman.com/news/local/community/boise/article105865477.html#storylink=cpy

OSHA cites companies for safety violations in NJ, PA, NY, VA and HI: Mane Concept, Inc., Ski Masonry LLC, Acme Parts Inc., Lucas Tree Experts, Hawaiian Ice company fined almost $800,000 for safety violations



Company Cited after Inspection Finds Hazards Remain at New Jersey Warehouse
New Jersey
OSHA conducted an inspection of Mane Concept Inc., after receiving a complaint of imminent safety hazards. Inspectors found that the Moonachie, N.J., hair distribution company failed to keep exit routes unobstructed, improperly used work space around an electrical box for storage, and did not properly store materials to prevent struck-by hazards. OSHA issued one repeat, one serious, and two willful violations, and proposed penalties totaling $181,280. The company was cited in February for similar violations. Read the news release for more information.

Pennsylvania Contractor Cited after Hazards Lead to Fatal Electrocution
Pennsylvania
A Pittsburgh masonry contractor has been cited for exposing workers to serious dangers after a laborer was electrocuted while doing residential restoration work. Following an investigation of the incident, OSHA issued citations to Ski Masonry LLC for allowing employees to work within 10 feet of overhead, energized, and uninsulated electrical lines; failing to provide fall protection; and using scaffolding without a secure base plate. Proposed penalties are $201,354. See the new release for more information.

OSHA and New York Manufacturer Reach Settlement to Improve Safety and Health
New York
OSHA has reached a settlement agreement with Acme Parts Inc. to improve workplace safety and health at the company’s facility in Brooklyn. OSHA found high levels of lead throughout the facility presenting serious hazards to employees. Under the terms of the agreement, Acme Parts will pay $40,000 in penalties. Additionally, the company will hire a qualified lead hazards and abatement consultant to evaluate the facility and to recommend improved practices. For more information, see the news release.

Virginia Cites Tree Company for Safety Violations after Worker Fatality
Virginia
The Virginia Occupational Safety and Health Program issued six citations and $100,270 in penalties to Lucas Tree Experts in Chesapeake for safety violations after a worker was electrocuted while trimming a tree near powerlines. Inspectors determined that the company failed to: provide personal protective equipment; follow requirements on line clearance and proximity to energized lines; and ensure workers were properly secured to trees with climbing and position ropes.

Hawaii Cites Company for Safety and Health Violations after Ammonia Release
Hawaii
The Hawaii Occupational Safety and Health Division issued 14 citations and $107,800 in penalties to Hawaiian Ice Company in Honolulu for exposing workers to inhalation hazards resulting from an uncontrolled release of anhydrous ammonia. Inspectors concluded that the company lacked procedures to isolate the chemical while workers were servicing refrigeration equipment. The company also failed to conduct in-house inspections, provide portable monitoring devices to detect leaks, and train workers.

A massive water main break flooded streets and forced the evacuation of about 50 residents at Crown Heights in Brooklyn, NYC









Water was shooting into the air for more than three hours after the pipe broke at about 4:30 a.m. outside 1520 Pacific St., between Albany and Kingston avenues

CROWN HEIGHTS, Brooklyn (WABC) -- A large water main break flooded streets and forced the evacuation of about 50 residents in Brooklyn Thursday morning.

Water was sent shooting into the air from the 40-inch main, which broke on Pacific Street in Crown Heights at around 4:40 a.m.

The residents were evacuated from two apartment buildings at 1526 Pacific Street and 180 Albany Avenue, both adjacent to the break.

They were being sheltered by the Red Cross.





There are no reports of injuries.


Workers were forced to shut multiple valves feeding the mains to drop the water pressure.

The city DEP has shut off the impacted water main.

The MTA has two buses on the scene that are being used as temporary shelter for the evacuated residents.

The following street closures remain in place:

--Albany Ave is closed to vehicle traffic from Atlantic Avenue to Dean Street.
--Pacific Street is closed to vehicle traffic from Albany Avenue to Brooklyn Avenue.
--The eastbound lane of Atlantic Avenue is being rerouted to the middle lane due to a flooding condition in that lane between Brooklyn Avenue and Albany Avenue.





=====================


Water main break in Crown Heights floods street, forces evacuations, officials say

By Nicole Brown nicole.brown@amny.com

November 2, 2017

A water main break flooded a Crown Heights street early Thursday morning, forcing dozens to evacuate, officials said.

Water was shooting into the air for more than three hours after the pipe broke at about 4:30 a.m. outside 1520 Pacific St., between Albany and Kingston avenues, the FDNY said. The water was shut off and the leak stopped shortly after 8 a.m., a spokesman said.

The flooding closed Pacific Street from Albany to Brooklyn avenues and Albany Avenue from Dean Street to Atlantic Avenue, the Office of Emergency Management said.

B15 and B43 buses were detoured in both directions and B65 buses were running with delays as a result, the MTA said.

Videos and photos posted to Twitter showed the water spraying several feet into the air.
The cause of the break was not immediately clear.   However, NYC has one of the oldest water infrastructures in the United States.  The recent rainfall could be a factor too, as the rushing flash floods may have undermined the water pipes.


The Department of Environmental Protection was investigating and would make repairs, as needed.

Worker at Caterpillar Inc. in Morton, Illinois was seriously injured by crane




MORTON, IL — An employee of Caterpillar Inc. in Morton was taken to a Peoria hospital early Wednesday morning after an accident at a facility there.

Morton Fire Chief Joe Kelley said his department sent an ambulance to the Caterpillar Morton plant about 4:20 a.m. While declining to give specifics, he said the employee appears to have been injured by a moving piece of equipment like a crane. The man’s identify as well as his condition when he was transported or later that day were not available Wednesday afternoon.

Janice Walters, a Caterpillar spokeswoman, said the employee is an electrician. He was taken to OSF Healthcare Saint Francis Medical Center.

“Employee safety is of utmost importance to Caterpillar, and we are in close contact with those involved,” she said.

Kelley said he wasn’t at the scene but believed the call required some form of advanced life support.

The chief said it’s not uncommon for Morton to respond to the Caterpillar facilities for a workplace accident, adding that they can respond as often as once a week.


====================

Employee injured at Morton, Illinois Caterpillar facility


By Tim Shelley
 Updated: Nov 01, 2017

A Caterpillar electrician was hospitalized early Wednesday after an accident at the Morton Caterpillar facility.

Morton Fire Chief Joe Kelley said his department responded to the facility around 4:50 a.m.

"On November 1, 2017, a Caterpillar electrician was injured while working at our Morton, IL facility. Employee safety is of utmost importance to Caterpillar and we are in close contact with those involved. We have been notified the employee has been taken to OSF St. Francis Medical Center for treatment," said Caterpillar spokesperson Janice Walters in an e-mailed statement.

The condition of the employee is not known. Kelley said the accident involved a piece of equipment, but more specific details were not available.

An official at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration in Peoria said the agency has not yet been notified of the accident as of 1 p.m. However, an employer has up to 24 hours to notify OSHA in the event of a workplace accident requiring hospitalization.



55 Years of Customer Parts Support at Morton


In 1958, Caterpillar Tractor Co. opened a new parts department facility in Morton, Ill. as part of its expansion plan. Operations from the East Peoria, Ill., Parts Department were transferred to the new Morton facility.

In the summer of 1956, ground was broken on the 100 acre site which, at that time, was immediately north of Morton's city limits. The steel started to rise on March 11, 1957, and the transfer of inventory from East Peoria to Morton began in December 1957. One thousand employees were originally employed at the facility when it opened in 1958 and many came from the East Peoria Parts Department.

In honor of Morton's 55th anniversary, a group of Caterpillar retirees who host facility tours of Morton provided a tour to Corporate Archivist Lee Fosburgh and recollected the multiple advancements of the facility throughout the years.

"We've had a constant history of expansion and improvement - since the very beginning," noted the team throughout the tour. The Caterpillar retirees who hosted the tour included: Nick Nicholson, who retired after 27 years of service with 25 being at Morton; Matt Scheffler, who retired after 31 years of service in product support; Dave Rankin, who retired after 40 years of service at Morton; Vernon Cox, who retired after 37 years of service with 17 being at Morton; and Ed Eaton, who retired after 33 years of service with 27 being at Morton.

"We have great documentation of our history within the collection of the Corporate Archives," Fosburgh said. "However, it's the stories of our retirees that really make our history come to life - Nick, Matt, Dave, Vernon and Ed do a remarkable job showcasing the heritage of Morton, as well as the company, throughout their tours."

Today, Morton is the central point for customer parts support with primary responsibility for receiving and shipping after-market parts to worldwide parts facilities and Cat® dealers.

Lineman electrocuted when the utility bucket he was in made contact with 25-kilovolt electrical lines in Cloverdale, Surrey in BC



Cloverdale, Surrey

 A worker in Surrey is being treated for burns and other possible injuries after a scary incident on Wednesday morning in Cloverdale.

The victim was working on the 5200 block of 184th Street when the utility bucket he was in made contact with 25-kilovolt electrical lines around 10:00 a.m.

B.C. Hydro was called on-scene to cut the power before he was brought down from the utility bucket. It’s not known at the time if he was doing work for B.C. Hydro or not.

Crews were called on-scene to rescue the worker. He was transferred to Royal Columbian Hospital for treatment.

Worksafe B.C. was also on-scene.

Worker Jesus Pimentel, 51, died after getting caught between two machines while he was operating equipment at the Shaw Plant 23 in Dalton, Georgia











Dalton, Georgia


51-Year-Old Worker At Shaw Facility At Dalton Dies In Plant Accident
Tuesday, October 31, 2017

A 51-year-old employee at the Shaw Plant in Dalton died Monday night in an accident at the facility.

Jesus Pimentel died while he was operating equipment at Plant 23.

Called to the scene were the Dalton Fire Department, Dalton Police and Whitfield County EMS.

The plant was temporarily shut down after the incident.


Thoughts but no prayers for the dead worker's family

Shaw spokeswoman Susan Farris said in a statement, 

"There is nothing more important to Shaw than the health and safety of every associate and we are investigating this incident. The plant will be temporarily shut down during this time. Our thoughts are with the associate's family during this difficult time."   No prayers for the poor worker who lost his life?


The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is investigating after a 51-year-old worker was killed in an accident at Shaw Plant 23 in Dalton Monday night.


OSHA spokesman Michael D'Aquino says that the Dalton site where the incident occurred was last inspected in 2015. The company is a wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.



Company Profile

A global flooring provider

Shaw Industries Group, Inc. supplies carpet, resilient, hardwood, laminate, tile and stone flooring products and synthetic turf to residential and commercial markets worldwide. We are a wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. with approximately 20,000 associates worldwide. Shaw is headquartered in Dalton, Georgia, with salespeople and/or offices located throughout the U.S. as well as Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, France, India, Mexico, Singapore, United Arab Emirates and the United Kingdom.

Captured Muslim terrorist Sayfullo Saipov, 29, started planning the Home Depot truck attack that killed 8 people about a year ago









NYC terror suspect planned bigger attack involving Brooklyn Bridge, asked for ISIS flag at hospital



Wednesday, November 01, 2017 11:19PM
LOWER MANHATTAN, New York (WABC) -- New details about the truck rampage suspect's apparent plan to carry out a deadly Halloween attack in New York City emerged late Wednesday.

Prosecutors said 29-year-old Sayfullo Saipov was inspired by ISIS videos he had watched on his cellphone. He started planning the attack about a year ago while in the U.S. -- and two months ago, he decided to use a truck.

The plan was carried out on Halloween because he believed there would be more people on the street, investigators said. The plan he executed followed instructions ISIS posted online for a truck attack "to a T."

Video and still images from traffic and surveillance cameras along the route of the attack show Saipov drove the rented Home Depot pickup truck carefully -- and at moderate speed -- until he entered the bike path at Houston Street in Lower Manhattan and accelerated.





Police arrest the suspect identified as 29-year-old Sayfullo Saipov from Tampa, Florida. (illmaticnyc/Instagram)

The nearly one-mile-long attack that killed eight people and injured about a dozen others spanned more than a mile, before the suspect crashed into a school bus and ran away. As he waved two fake guns, an NYPD officer shot him in the hip. He's expected to survive.

Eyewitness News obtained video taken by a Stuyvesant High School student that shows the driver running erratically around in the street, in between passing cars, dressed in dark clothing and carrying the weapons.

This photo shows him in police custody following the incident:




(Photo/@Illmaticnyc via Instagram)

Investigators said Saipov rented a truck on October 22 -- nine days before the bike path attack in Lower Manhattan -- so that he could practice making turns.


His plan was more elaborate than what was carried out. Prosecutors said he planned to drive onto the Brooklyn Bridge after the bike path attack to continue to hit more pedestrians, but was stopped after he struck the school bus and the truck became inoperable.

Saipov even planned to drive around with ISIS flags on the truck, but decided against it to not draw attention to himself, court documents said.

While in the hospital after his capture, he asked to fly an ISIS flag in his hospital room and said "he felt good about what he had done."

Law enforcement officials brought him to his arraignment by wheelchair Wednesday. No cameras are allowed, but here's a look at Saipov via sketch:





New York City terror suspect Sayfullo Saipov appeared in court on Wednesday, November 1, 2017. (Jane Rosenberg)

Following the attack, officers recovered various items through their investigation. The two fake guns Saipov was allegedly carrying were identified as a paintball gun and a pellet gun. From inside the rental truck, officers also recovered three knives, a wallet with a Florida driver's license, two cellphones and a stun gun.

A handwritten note investigators found was 10 feet from the driver's door of the truck and contained both Arabic and English. The Arabic portion of the note said "No God but God and Muhammad is his Prophet" and "Islamic Supplication. It will endure." "It will endure" refers to ISIS.

Law enforcement officials also obtained a search warrant to go through the phones and they found:

-- On cellphone 1, 90 videos and 3,800 images of ISIS-related propaganda, many showing ISIS fighters killing people and instructions on bomb making

-- On cellphone 2, they found Internet searches for the Home Depot in Passaic (done on October 4), a search for "Halloween in nyc" (on October 15) and a search for Home Depot truck rentals (on October 18).

Prosecutors announced federal terrorism charges against Saipov late Wednesday, which means he can get the death penalty if convicted -- even though New York state has no death penalty.

BEFORE THE ATTACK

Officials say Saipov entered the United States through JFK Airport from Uzbekistan in 2010. He came under what is called the 'Diversity Visa Program,' which offers a lottery for people from countries with few immigrants in America.
He had a green card that allowed permanent legal residence. After entering the country, he reportedly went from Ohio to Tampa, Florida and then to Paterson, New Jersey, where he lived with his wife and three children for several years.

Saipov was also the registered statutory agent for a pair of Ohio-based trucking companies: Sayf Motors Inc. in Cincinnati, and Bright Auto LLC in Cuyahoga Falls.
Uber confirmed that Saipov had worked as an Uber driver, and the company said he had passed a background check but has since been banned from the app.

"We are horrified by this senseless act of violence," an Uber spokesperson said in a statement. "Our hearts are with the victims and their families. We have reached out to law enforcement to provide our full assistance."



OPINION
People are wrong when they call these Muslims "radical" jihadists.  These people are not necessarily radical;  they can be "militants", a much broader category of Muslims.  

So, the problem we are facing is much bigger that people think.  Imagine the ways these people can hurt the general population: poisoning the food, the water supplies, etc.  Contaminating the food at restaurants where many of these Muslims work.  So, you have been per-warned;  do not claim that you are surprised next time you see a Muslim link to a poisoning case.