Roofing Firm Owner, Foreman Charged with Manslaughter for Worker’s Death

The owner of a roofing company and its foreman were indicted on manslaughter charges in connection with the 2008 death of a worker who fell from a roof in San Francisco, the San Francisco District Attorney announced Monday.

The worker, Antonio Martinez, fell 38 feet from a four-story building where he was working without a harness, scaffolding or rail, according to the D.A.’s office.

Roofers are almost 10 times more likely than other workers to be killed on the job. In 2008, the workplace fatality rate for roofers was 34.4 deaths per 100,000 workers; it was 3.7 deaths per 100,000 workers across all occupations in the same year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Sam Shim and his roofing company, California C&R, Inc., along with the company foreman, Jwa Young Kim, are charged with involuntary manslaughter and being held on $300,000 bail. Shim has also been charged with tax evasion and workers compensation premium fraud, the D.A. said.

Calls to California C&R were not returned.

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One comment to “Roofing Firm Owner, Foreman Charged with Manslaughter for Worker’s Death”

  1. J Bridge

    I nearly had an employee do this today – hence my search. Very frightening!

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