Injured customers suing U-Haul over accidents have sought key equipment, only to find it lost or discarded.
Pinned inside an overturned Ford Explorer on Interstate 5 in Bakersfield, Gabriel Koloszar looked up to see her friend Paulo Aguilar hanging unconscious from his seat belt, his blood dripping down on her.
Rescuers pulled Koloszar out through the windshield. When she tried to stand, another passenger cried out: “Oh my God, Gabby. Your feet!” Only then, she recalled, did she look down to see her mangled flesh.
The trauma of that morning turned to outrage after Koloszar and Aguilar sued U-Haul International Inc., alleging that the accident was caused by a defective tire on the trailer they had been towing.
When their attorneys sought to inspect the tire and rim, they were told that would be impossible.
The evidence had disappeared.
A Kern County Superior Court judge declared in December that he would sanction U-Haul for “extreme negligence” in losing the evidence. Two weeks later, a federal judge in Ohio penalized U-Haul for similar conduct in a separate case.
U-Haul, the leader of the do-it-yourself moving industry, has repeatedly lost, altered or discarded truck and trailer parts sought by injured customers who sued the company, a Times investigation found.
Read more: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-na-haul26jun26,0,7761945.htmlstory
