The hotshot pickup truck driver was found not guilty in the deaths of seven motorcyclists in a 2019 crash in New Hampshire. Also: Funding available for Class 8 zero-emission truck replacement in California; latest Highway Angel.
The hotshot pickup truck driver was found not guilty in the deaths of seven motorcyclists in a 2019 crash in New Hampshire. Also: Funding available for Class 8 zero-emission truck replacement in California; latest Highway Angel.
Volodymyr Zhukovskyy faces 22 charges in connection to the June 2019 crash in Randolph, N.H. Author: Beth Brogan (NEWS CENTER Maine) Published: 4:13 PM EDT March 15, 2021 Updated: 4:13 PM EDT March 15, 2021
CONCORD, N.H.
Editor s note: The video above aired in October 2019.
A New Hampshire grand jury has re-indicted a Massachusetts trucker on 22 charges in connection with a June 2019 fatal crash in Randolph that killed seven motorcyclists and injured three more.
Volodymyr Zhukovskyy, 25, of West Springfield, Massachusetts, was originally indicted in October 2019 on seven counts each of manslaughter and negligent homicide-DUI, as well as charges of reckless conduct and aggravated DUI.
He now faces seven counts each of manslaughter, negligent homicide, and negligent homicide while driving under the influence, and one count of reckless conduct.
Investigative: Driver says trucking company threatened family after he alleged illegal practices freightwaves.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from freightwaves.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Investigative: KeepTruckin fights NTSB bid to remove its ELD technology in wake of crash
KeepTruckin claims NTSB investigators didn’t understand the technical and regulatory differences between AOBRDs and ELDs
13 12,726 11 minutes read KeepTruckin is petitioning the National Transportation Safety Board to rescind its recommendation that the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration remove KeepTruckin’s logging devices from its list of self-certified vendors. Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves
Nearly three months after the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) called for KeepTruckin’s electronic logging technology to be removed from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s list of self-certified providers, the San Francisco-based company is fighting to clear its name.