FDNY family sues Deutsche Bank owner, contractors

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FDNY family sues Deutsche Bank owner, contractors

By Amy Westfeldt
The Associated Press


AP Photo/Eric M. Hazard
Firefighters at the scene of the August fire.
NEW YORK — The owner of a condemned ground zero skyscraper and several contractors hired to dismantle it turned it into a "death trap" filled with fire hazards, a lawsuit filed by the family of a firefighter killed there last August said.

Wednesday's lawsuit accuses the Lower Manhattan Development Corp., which owned the former Deutsche Bank tower, another government agency overseeing it and the contractors of negligence in firefighter Robert Beddia's death.

Beddia, 53, and firefighter Joseph Graffagnino, 33, were killed Aug. 18 after climbing up more than a dozen floors into the burning tower, which was being dismantled. Careless smoking is believed to have started the fire; a grand jury has been hearing evidence to consider criminal charges.
The lawsuit, filed in state Supreme Court, renews charges made by lawmakers and community officials who have looked into the fire: An inexperienced contractor was hired to take down the toxic tower, and multiple agencies didn't have emergency plans, accessible stairwells with exit routes for firefighters or a working standpipe that would have supplied fire hoses with water.

The lawsuit accuses the main subcontractor, The John Galt Corporation, of allowing its workers to smoke, and other contractors, including Bovis Lend Lease and URS Inc., of failing to remove fire hazards and give firefighters floor plans or other information to help them safely fight the blaze.

The lawsuit also named the Lower Manhattan Construction Command Center, a state-city agency that oversaw demolition of the building, which had been damaged on Sept. 11, 2001, when the World Trade Center collapsed into it.

A spokesman for the agencies declined comment Wednesday.

Bovis, the main contractor still on the job, doesn't comment on pending litigation, spokeswoman Mary Costello said. A spokeswoman for Galt, which was fired from the job a week after the fire, declined comment. An e-mail to URS wasn't immediately returned.

Beddia family attorney Aryeh S. Portnoy said he may file a lawsuit in the future against city agencies charged with the building's safety. The Fire Department of New York has said it hadn't inspected the building for more than a year and never had a plan to fight the fire.

 




Associated PressCopyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.




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