Houston Chronicle Sunday

Iowa trucking company had a history of trouble before trailer deaths in Texas

- By Ryan J. Foley

IOWA CITY, Iowa — The trucking company linked to the recent deadly human smuggling case in Texas had promoted itself as an American success: a family firm whose hardworkin­g drivers helped keep the U.S. economy running.

But behind that image was a cutthroat business that flouted federal laws for years, yet managed to stay afloat despite financial troubles and tangles with prosecutor­s, regulators and tax collectors, according to public records and interviews with former drivers.

Now, Pyle Transporta­tion faces the biggest threat to its survival yet after one of its contract drivers was charged this past week in the deaths of 10 immigrants found in a sweltering Pyle trailer in San Antonio’s 100-degree heat. Investigat­ors are scrutinizi­ng Pyle’s claim that it knew nothing about an operation that federal authoritie­s have described as sophistica­ted and possibly linked to a Mexican cartel. Federal regulators have launched an investigat­ion into the company’s safety record.

The driver, 60-year-old James “Bear” Bradley Jr., has told investigat­ors that he was unaware any immigrants were in the trailer, saying he heard their pleas after stopping Sunday at a Walmart to urinate. Investigat­ors say dozens of immigrants were packed into the dark trailer after being smuggled across the border.

Company owner Brian Pyle has denied any knowledge of human smuggling but declined to comment last week on the company’s operations. On its website, which has since been taken down, Pyle Transporta­tion advertised its fleet of high-end rigs and boasted of delivering refrigerat­ed shipments of meat and produce on time to customers from its rural Iowa base. Playing upbeat music and flashing photos of smiling truckers, the site touted love of country, faith in God and the company’s slogan: “Keepin’ it Cool Since 1950.”

Pressures cited

Yet former drivers told the Associated Press that the company routinely pushed them to violate federal safety rules. They say they were pressured to drive too many hours without rest, to falsify their logs to conceal those violations and to transport overweight loads on unrealisti­c deadlines. They said they faced retaliatio­n if they complained and that Pyle refused to pay wages they were owed when they quit.

Two of Bradley’s former Pyle colleagues were struggling to understand what happened.

“Knowing Bear, the pieces don’t fit,” said Paul Terry, 68, of Denver. “I believe Bear was set up. He is a country boy, and he don’t know that much. No way in the world could he orchestrat­e something like that. I will say that on my kids’ grave.”

Former driver Tim Moffitt said that he believed the company had to have some knowledge of the operation, calling it a good place to work only “if you don’t like rules.”

“They are always looking for ways to save money and make money,” said Moffitt, who has known Bradley for 30 years.

The company’s relationsh­ip with Bradley was reflected on its nowdefunct website, where he was pictured smiling with Pyle in its “Hall of Fame” of workers.

Pyle Transporta­tion has long been an influentia­l company in Schaller, a northwest Iowa town of 750 that doesn’t have a police officer. Residents say it was run by the late Don Pyle before facing troubles in the 1990s after it was passed to his son, Michael.

The son and his Pyle Truck Lines pleaded guilty in 2001 to falsifying Department of Transporta­tion records and were put on probation. Michael Pyle’s children took control of the business a few years later when Pyle Transporta­tion formed, but he remained involved. Michael Pyle declined comment, hanging up on a reporter.

IRS allegation­s

The IRS alleged in 2015 that Pyle Transporta­tion refused to pay employment and highway use taxes for years, racking up $150,000 in liabilitie­s.

The company has also been ordered to pay penalties for falsifying records on drivers’ hours and has been operating with a “conditiona­l” safety rating, meaning it had been out of compliance with regulation­s.

Bradley went to work for the company in 2010 in response to an internet ad, and later recruited Terry and Moffitt to join him, they recalled. Terry said at first they made good money delivering pork from Iowa slaughterh­ouses to Texas and returning with loads of produce and steel. But Terry and Moffitt left after employment disputes.

“They will run you to death, and you have to falsify your logs to make it work,” said Terry, who according to court records has been unable to collect a $2,000 judgment for unpaid wages that he obtained after quitting in 2014.

Cody Winters, 29, of Charles City, Iowa, said he would be stunned if Pyle was complicit in smuggling even if the company was “crooked’ in other ways. He sued the company to collect $3,300 in unpaid wages after he was fired and left stranded at a truck stop in 2015.

“They appeal to drivers by keeping big Peterbilts to drive. But then you get there, and it’s not good at all. It’s just a show,” he said. “I thought, ‘How is this place even staying in business?’ ”

 ?? Jared Strong / Carroll Daily Times Herald ?? Brian Pyle, owner of Pyle Transporta­tion, the Iowa trucking company linked to the deadly case of immigrant smuggling in Texas, speaks to reporters last week in Schaller, Iowa. Investigat­ors are scrutinizi­ng the company’s claim that it knew nothing...
Jared Strong / Carroll Daily Times Herald Brian Pyle, owner of Pyle Transporta­tion, the Iowa trucking company linked to the deadly case of immigrant smuggling in Texas, speaks to reporters last week in Schaller, Iowa. Investigat­ors are scrutinizi­ng the company’s claim that it knew nothing...

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