Pete Coleman died after he was run over by his bin lorry at Woodside Leisure Park A waste collection company has been fined nearly £2 million after a binman was killed when he was dragged under the wheels of his runaway lorry. Peter Coleman, 54, died after he became trapped under the rear axle of his lorry at Woodside Leisure Park in Watford in 2014. The father-of-two from Dunstable was alone when he attempted to stop the Volvo lorry rolling down an embankment at around 6.10am on October 11. At Luton Crown Court this morning, Mr Coleman s employers, F&R Cawley Limited, were fined £1.5 million and told to pay prosecution costs of £475,000 after Mr Coleman s lorry was found to have had two defects - a faulty set of brakes on the second axle, and a mechanism that stopped bins being lifted while the lorry was in gear had been disabled.
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and
the Lost Boys, spent two weeks adding sound effects and cleaning up dialogue with his partner Clare Hines. They finished the final mix two weeks ago for the film, which follows an underworld kingpin who returns to London, reigniting a feud with a vengeful cop and beginning a violent chain of events.
Above: The trailer for Nememis with audio edited by Pete Coleman and Clare Hines “It was a fantastic and enjoyable thing to do. I have seen the film about a hundred times now so I won’t be leaping up to watch it immediately when it comes out, but it was very enjoyable,” said Mr Coleman.
UC study: $1.4 billion economic impact of Black-owned businesses in the Cincinnati region Feb 5, 2021
Members of the African American Chamber of Commerce and supporters: Morgan A. Owens (far left), April Pope (front center), Jason Dunn (behind Pope), AACC President and CEO Eric H. Kearney (far right), and Roy Sutton (left of Kearney) among many other friends and community members. Photo provided
By Dan Yount
The Cincinnati Herald
The African American Chamber of Commerce, in partnership with University of Cincinnati Economics Center, did a study, which shows that Greater Cincinnati Black businesses had a $1.4 billion economic impact. This is the first study in the nation by a chamber of Commerce to quantify the economic impact of Black businesses.