Toronto Star

Limo driver’s family believes vehicle unsafe

Issues with brake system were reported last month

- MICHAEL HILL

Relatives of the limousine driver involved in a crash that killed 20 people in upstate New York said Tuesday they believe he was unwittingl­y assigned an unsafe vehicle.

The family of Scott Lisinicchi­a released a statement through a lawyer shortly after another attorney representi­ng the limousine company, Prestige Limousine, said the driver might have been unfamiliar with the rural road.

Lisinicchi­a was driving the limousine that ran through a stop sign Saturday at the bottom of a T-intersecti­on on a rural road 40 kilometres west of Albany. Two pedestrian­s and all 18 people in the limo celebratin­g a woman’s birthday died.

The statement from Lisinicchi­a’s lawyer said he would never have “knowingly put others in harm’s way” and cautioned against jumping to conclusion­s.

“The family believes that, unbeknowns­t to him, he was pro- vided with a vehicle that was neither roadworthy nor safe for any of its occupants,” according to the statement from Grant & Longworth.

Prestige Limousine has been criticized for maintainin­g vehicles rife with violations and for employing a driver lacking a commercial licence. The deadly crash also has shined fresh light on the controvers­ial history of the business owner, a former FBI informant.

The limousine that ran the stop sign was cited for code violations Sept. 4, including a problem with the antilock brake system malfunctio­n indicator system. Four of the Gansevoort, N.Y.-based company’s limos were cited for 22 maintenanc­e violations this year, though none were deemed critical.

“Those safety issues had been addressed and corrected,” attorney Lee Kindlon, who represents Prestige, told CBS News. “Not all infraction­s are major. A lot of these things are minor and were fixed.”

Kindlon said he doesn’t think those infraction­s contribute­d to the crash.

 ?? STEPHANIE KEITH GETTY IMAGES ?? Mourners attend a candleligh­t vigil on Monday for the victims of the fatal limousine crash in Amsterdam, N.Y.
STEPHANIE KEITH GETTY IMAGES Mourners attend a candleligh­t vigil on Monday for the victims of the fatal limousine crash in Amsterdam, N.Y.

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