Before dawn on Feb. 23, Darius Williams ran his Nissan Sentra off a North Carolina interstate at 80 miles per hour. A length of guardrail pierced his door, according to the police report, driving the 24-year-oldâs body into the opposite back seat.
Three days later, with police attributing the accident to reckless driving and Williams lying in intensive care, a self-described safety expert named Joshua Harman drove past the scene. Spotting debris and the jagged end of a guardrail bending toward the highway, he swerved to a stop.
âThe evidence always tells a story,â he said.
Suspecting he knew this storyâs ending, he steered his truck to the junkyard where Williamsâ Nissan had been towed. Some 10 feet of guardrail, doubled back on itself, skewered the car. Harman pointed his camera toward the bloodied back seat and snapped a picture of a 175-pound piece of steel lodged amid the wreckage. A sticker identified its maker: Trinity Highway Products LLC.
To hear Harman tell it, something has gone seriously wrong with Americaâs guardrails. With as much as $1 billion possibly at stake, Harmanâs tale is one of bad blood, allegations of fraud and wrongful death and regulatory gray areas along the countryâs taxpayer-funded highways.
Harman is suing Trinity Highway and its Dallas-based owner, Trinity Industries Inc. (TRN), alleging that it made quiet design changes that transformed guardrail systems across the U.S. into potentially deadly hazards. His focus is something called an energy-absorbing end terminal: Installed at the end of a guardrail and typically marked with yellow and black stripes, itâs designed to give way when hit, absorbing energy to slow a crashing car.
Highly Confident
Trinity, one of the biggest guardrail makers in the U.S., first gained federal approval for its ET-Plus end terminal in 2000. Harmanâs suit alleges that the company changed the dimensions of the ET-Plus sometime between 2002 and 2005 without telling federal authorities. Instead of acting like a shock absorber, he claims in the 2012 suit, Trinityâs modified ET-Plus can lock up, behaving more like a giant shiv.
The case is set to go before a jury in July.
Trinity maintains a âhigh degree of confidenceâ in the several hundred thousand ET-Plus units it says are installed around the country, spokesman Jack Todd said. Trinity declined to make executives available for interviews.
âCosmetic Changesâ
Trinityâs ET-Plus â"- including âall improvement modifications thereafterâ -- has met federal requirements since its 2000 debut, according to a company filing for the previous quarter. In 2012, a company representative testified in a different suit that Trinity had made several âcosmetic changesâ to the end terminal that didnât require new approvals because they didnât hurt its performance.
Trinity fell as much as 1.6 percent today in trading in New York. The shares were down 0.8 percent at $81.52 at 3 p.m. Through yesterday, its shares had risen 51 percent since the beginning of the year. The companyâs yearly revenue has more than doubled since 2010, to $4.4 billion last year.
Trinity characterized Harman in court documents as âan opportunistic litigant hoping for a windfall.â He is seeking âto retaliate against Trinity for pursuing a patent-infringement lawsuit against his companies,â it added.
Harman used to make and install guardrails himself. Trinity sued him in 2011 for infringing its patents. Since then, Harman scaled down his private operations, trimmed more than 100 employees -- most of his workforce -- and sought Chapter 11 protection to reorganize his companies.
Judgeâs Ruling
The 45-year-old Virginian spent more than 300 days on the road last year, away from his wife and two school-age daughters, visiting crash sites to bolster his case against Trinity. The Chevy Silverado he drives has two end terminals in back -- one that he says is Trinityâs original, the other its modified version.
Harman says heâs motivated not by business, but by what he sees as a safety hazard.
âItâs irrelevant if Iâm crazy,â he said.
Trinity has sought to get Harmanâs whistleblower suit dismissed, arguing he isnât a whistleblower because he is basing his allegations largely on public information rather than insider knowledge.
U.S. District Judge Rodney Gilstrap in Marshall, Texas, ruled that Harmanâs professional experience qualifies him to sue as a whistleblower and dismissed most of Trinityâs other objections.
Lawyers representing whistleblowers typically donât earn fees unless they win. Harman is represented by Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP, whose founder, David Boies, is known for taking on the likes of Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) and MasterCard Inc. (MA) Boies Schiller lawyers declined to comment on its fee arrangement.
Related Lawsuits
Harman isnât the only one asking questions. A coalition of state highway officials is reviewing the performance of several end terminal models, motivated in part by complaints about the ET-Plus. Nevada stopped installing ET-Plus terminals in January, pending performance testing of the modified version.
And in May, Safety Research & Strategies Inc., a product-safety advocacy group, filed separate suits seeking records related to the ET-Plus from the Department of Transportationâs Federal Highway Administration and from the Florida Department of Transportation. SRS, based in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, alleges broad âperformance anomaliesâ with the ET-Plus since it was introduced.
Billion Dollars
Because Trinityâs terminals are approved by the FHWA, state highway departments that buy them are often eligible for federal reimbursements. Under the 2009 stimulus package, the U.S. government reimbursed up to 100 percent of local buyersâ costs for highway projects. Still, the FHWA has no authority to ask states to recall equipment, said Joshua Schank, who runs the Eno Center for Transportation, a nonpartisan think tank.
âIf thereâs a problem, whoâs going to end up being on the hook?â said Sean Kane, SRSâs president and founder.
Neil Gaffney, a spokesman for the FWHA, said the ET-Plus was successfully crash-tested in 2005 and that the agency hasnât received complaints from states about the unitsâ performance since then. Dick Kane, a spokesman for the Florida department, said it had produced the requested documents.
Harman, suing to recover taxpayer funds on behalf of the U.S., could take up to about a third of any judgment. His suit potentially presents a âbillion dollarsâ worth of damagesâ for Trinity, a lawyer for the company said in a May hearing. In a company filing, Trinity said it doesnât believe a loss is probable from the litigation.
Road Trip
Eleven of 15 analysts tracked by Bloomberg rate Trinity shares as a buy. Only one, Art Hatfield of Raymond James & Associates, expects it to underperform the market. Hatfield believes that the railway industry will slow, hurting Trinityâs railcar operation, he said in an interview.
Todd, the Trinity spokesman, pointed out that the federal government investigated Harmanâs allegations against Trinity and declined to join in the suit. Peter Carr, a U.S. Department of Justice spokesman, declined to comment on that decision.
On a recent five-state guardrail-scouting trip from Texas to North Carolina, Harman was at the wheel at 2 a.m. Riding shotgun was Steven Lawrence, a Texas lawyer who works alongside Boies Schiller on Harmanâs suit and also has filed personal injury and wrongful death suits against Trinity.
Among Lawrenceâs clients is a 37-year-old former Marine named Jay Traylor, who lost both legs in a January 2014 car wreck. Lawrenceâs suit alleges that Trinityâs âunreasonably dangerousâ ET-Plus penetrated Traylorâs floorboard, impaled him and left him a double amputee.
Lost Leg
Harman put North Carolina on his itinerary to see Traylor, and the two found common ground. Harman gave Traylor a formula for a pain-relieving salve. Harman says he used it himself, two decades ago, after he lost his own left leg in a construction accident.
âIâve looked at every guardrail since Iâve had this accident,â Traylor said in an interview. âWhen measures are put out to prevent accidents and injuries as safety precautions, you should be able to trust them.â
Lawrence and other attorneys have brought at least nine personal-injury and wrongful-death suits against Trinity. After visiting some 200 crash sites and combing through news reports, Harman says he has turned up what he believes are roughly 20 deaths in accidents linked to the modified ET-Plus.
In all these cases, Trinity says it would take a more comprehensive analysis -- one that considers a vehicleâs speed, weight and angle of impact -- to determine how its system performed. Federal crash criteria specify conditions under which the guardrail system must perform to certain standards, which donât necessarily cover every crash scenario.
Virginia Teenagers
Harman started his first business with his brother in 1988 when both were teenagers in Virginia. They planted grass at roadsides and later began installing guardrails and fencing. From the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s, Harman bought Trinity guardrail systems to install on state highways, he said.
It was the dawn of a new era in roadside safety. The guardrails with exposed ends that were the standard into the early 1960s could spear cars that hit them. Later, road crews buried the ends of some guardrails -- but those, it turned out, could serve as ramps, causing cars that hit them to roll over.
In 1989, a company called Syro Steel Co. introduced the ET-2000, an energy-absorbing end terminal designed by Texas A&M University and funded by the Texas Department of Transportation.
Buffer Mechanism
The ET-2000 did for guardrails what air bags did for cars. When a car hit Syroâs end terminal, the mechanism would act as a buffer that would absorb energy as it pressed into the rail behind it -- forcing the W-shaped guardrail through a slot and flattening it into a ribbon of steel that deflected away from the car.
Trinity Industries bought Syro in 1992. In 2000, Trinity received approval from the FHWA for its ET-Plus, a lighter version of the ET-2000, according to the FHWA acceptance letter that unlocked federal funding.
Around 2008, Harman said he started looking at the patent numbers marked on end-terminal models to see if any patents had lapsed. He reverse-engineered an ET-Plus from 2000, he said, using it as a model for a generic copy. He said one of his companies, SPIG Industry LLC, made 280 of them that he installed on Virginiaâs highways.
Patent Infringement
In March 2011, Trinity sued SPIG for patent infringement.
Harman claimed in court filings that Trinity had listed incorrect and expired patent numbers on their ET-Plus units. âIf I knew it was a patented product, I wouldnât have ever made it,â he said.
In a court filing, Trinity denied allegations that it marked its ET-Plus heads with the wrong patent numbers.
Harmanâs company agreed to stop production and work with Virginia highway authorities to determine if they should remove the ones already installed, Harman said.
Trinity continued its suit against Harman. The most Trinity could recover in damages for patent infringement was about $53,000, according to an expert report Trinity submitted as part of the case. The legal bills, on Harmanâs side, were far greater -- at least $7 million by the time the patent suit ended in a confidential settlement in late 2012, according to Chapter 11 documents filed by SPIG.
Full Accounting
Trinity Highway also wanted to know where Harman had installed every one of his copies. In September 2011, one of its employees sent Harman an e-mail, reviewed by Bloomberg News, repeating its request for âa full and complete listing of all locations/installationsâ of the terminals.
The patent case had nothing to do with money and âeverything to do with stopping somebody from copying our product and getting the non-tested products off the roadway,â said a Trinity employee who asked not to be named because this person isnât authorized to speak on the subject.
Harmanâs own copy of an early ET-Plus, he said in an interview, had been involved in five accidents and had performed â100 percent appropriate.â If his models were working, he asked himself, why was Trinity so eager to get them off the road?
Harman started surveying accident sites in Virginia and Tennessee. In December 2011, he took a two-week trip across eight states, documenting what he said were more than 50 accident sites as far west as New Mexico.
Eureka Moment
Harman said his Eureka moment came at a crash site at Mile 153 on I-40, in Arkansas. This rail emerged from an ET-Plus with one of its edges folded over: Something was restricting it. Harman pulled out his calipers. The guardrail, he found, was trying to squeeze through a slot that was at one point an inch shorter and an inch narrower than in the original.
âThere was no question,â he said, it was the smaller versions that were seizing. âThen I found another in Virginia.â
He sued Trinity in March 2012, alleging in an amended complaint that it had made five changes to the ET-Plus without notifying the FHWA. He alleged Trinityâs move lowered its manufacturing costs and made the ET-Plus more difficult to reuse after accidents than the earlier version, requiring highway authorities to purchase new ones.
Trinity, in court filings, cited FHWA standards that say manufacturers donât have to report modifications that reduce costs or improve functioning if âgood engineering judgmentâ deems they wonât degrade performance.
Performance Enhancements
In the filings, it said it made four âfabrication revisionsâ in 2005 at the suggestion of engineers with the Texas A&M Transportation Institute, which originally designed and patented the ET-Plus. In a February 2013 letter to state transportation departments, Trinity and Texas A&M said the revisions were meant âto enhance the already demonstrated performance of the system in the field.â
Rick Davenport, a spokesman for the Texas A&M Transportation Institute, declined to comment on matters involving ongoing litigation.
On Feb. 14, 2012, about seven years after Harman alleged the changes began showing up on U.S. roads, Trinity officials met with FHWA engineer Nick Artimovich, according to e-mails sent by Artimovich that were reviewed by Bloomberg News. They alerted him to one change in the end terminal - the reduction in the guide channelâs width, to four inches from five - that it had omitted in documentation for a May 2005 crash-test.
âValid Questionâ
About two weeks later, Artimovich wrote to two FHWA colleagues saying that he believed Trinity had correctly tested the modified ET-Plus design during the crash test. âHowever, there does seem to be a valid question over the field performance of the current ET-Plus compared to earlier versions,â he wrote in the e-mail, a copy of which was obtained by Bloomberg News.
Artimovich declined to comment for this article.
Harman, in his suit, said it isnât clear which version of the ET-Plus was crash-tested. Gaffney of the FHWA said in his statement that Trinity told the agency that the ET-Plus with a four-inch channel had met crash-test standards.
Yesterday, Judge Gilstrap ruled to keep the trial in July, despite a motion by both parties to delay it until September. âThe parties have conducted themselves with a level of contentiousness and vitriol that is as surprising as it is unwarranted,â Gilstrap wrote in his order.
Harman, meanwhile, continues his guardrail search.
Carolina Junkyard
Back in the North Carolina junkyard, Harman inspected Williamsâ white Nissan resting along a chain-link fence. Its roof was caved in. Windshields were gone. A door, detached, leaned against the vehicleâs side.
âLord, have mercy,â Harman said. âI donât know how he survived - if he survived.â
Williams suffered a bruised lung, lower spine injuries and fractures to his leg, upper arm, eye and pelvis, he said by e-mail. He declined to comment further.
On the way out of the junkyard, Harman asked whether he could buy the wreck to preserve it as evidence. A few minutes later, he was back on the highway.
âPeople are dying,â Harman said. âThis is an issue I brought to light, and I will see it to the end.â
To contact the reporter on this story: Patrick G. Lee in New York at plee315@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael Hytha at mhytha@bloomberg.net Jeffrey D Grocott, Anne Reifenberg
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