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30 July 2006

Railways Sued Over Arborg Man's Death

Arborg Manitoba - An Arborg couple has launched a lawsuit against two railroad companies and the State of Minnesota, alleging their 21-year-old son's fatal collision with a freight train last year shouldn't have happened.
 
Robbie Johnson, 21, died instantly on 28 Jan 2005, when his semi - carrying a load of crushed cars - collided with a Northern Plains freight train hauling grain on U.S. Highway 59 near Thief River Falls, Minn. Both Minnesota State Patrol and a Pennington County attorney confirmed in the days following the crash that warning lights at the crossing weren't working at the time.
 
CHARGES NEVER LAID
 
Johnson's father, David, filed a suit 17 Jul 2006 in a Pennington County district court against Northern Plains Railroad, the Canadian Pacific Railroad, and the State of Minnesota. The suit alleges an operating licence issued by the state to the railroad requires the presence of a flagman at the crossing 24 hours a day if the signals are not operating.
 
Al Rogalla, assistant attorney for the county, told the Sun in February 2005 that railway workers followed procedure appropriately prior to the crash, which derailed the train. No criminal charges were ever laid in the incident.
 
"The train stopped before it got to the intersection, then the train's conductor... waved the train through," he said at the time. "(Johnson) must not have seen the train."
 
Northern Plains president Gregg Haug previously said the train's crew followed procedures laid out by the U.S. Railroad Administration.
 
"In this case, they stopped and actually waited for one car to clear," Haug told the Sun last year. "There were no other cars that they could see, so they started through the crossing again. That's when (Johnson's) truck must have hit."
 
CPR has been named because it leases approximately 640 km of track in North Dakota and Minnesota to Northern Plains.
 
Johnson's family has asked for damages of at least $50,000 from each defendant.
 
All allegations have yet to be proven in court.
 
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