The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Film company fined in ‘The Walking Dead’ stuntman’s death

- By Kate Brumback

ATLANTA» A film company faces a citation and fine after a stuntman for “The Walking Dead” fell to his death last year during filming on the hit show’s Georgia set, federal authoritie­s said Friday.

John Bernecker, 33, died July 12 from injuries suffered in a fall on the set in Senoia, about 35 miles (56 kilometers) south of Atlanta, Coweta County coroner Richard Hawk said at the time.

The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion said in a news release that it issued a “serious citation” to Stalwart Films LLC. The agency said it proposed a fine of $12,675, the maximum allowable fine for a single serious violation, for “failure to provide adequate protection from fall hazards.”

“This was a tragic and terrible accident,” Stalwart Films said in an emailed statement Friday. “We take the safety of our employees extremely seriously on all of our sets and comply with — and frequently exceed — industry safety standards. We disagree with the issuance of this citation and are considerin­g our response.”

The company has 15 business days from the when it receives the citation and proposed penalty to either comply, request an informal conference with the agency’s area director or contest the findings before the Occupation­al Safety and Health Review Commission, OSHA said in the news release.

A serious violation exists when a workplace hazard could cause an accident that would most likely result in death or serious physical harm, unless the employer didn’t know or couldn’t have known of the violation, according to OSHA’s website. It carries a less severe penalty than a willful violation, which exists when an employer knowingly failed to comply with a legal requiremen­t or showed indifferen­ce for employee safety, or a repeat violation, which exists when an employer has previously been cited for the same or a similar problem.

“This tragedy should serve as a wake-up call for the entertainm­ent industry,” OSHA Atlanta Regional Administra­tor Kurt Peter meyer said in the news release. “The entire industry needs to commit to safety practices for actors and stunt people involved in this type of work.”

The citation, dated Wednesday, says the company could have used a number of methods to reduce the risk to those performing stunts on high platforms, including reducing the fall distance, providing personal protective equipment to lower risks or providing spotters with individual crash pads or other equipment to protect performers and help correct an errant fall.

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