Details of Work-Related Deaths in London in 2001


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last updated 8 October 2007




Deaths in 2001


Click on the names below for further case details

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

WHITING Douglas 50 15 March Worker Islington Construction Costain
ALLISON Frederick 51 6 April Worker Bexley Transport Local Council
BONNER Stephen 64 28 April Worker Barking and Dagenham Construction Mead Contractors Ltd
KASSIM Nurani Adedoyin 36 18 July Worker Croydon Railways Primat Recruitment Ltd
BELLINGER Michael 40 26 July Worker Bexley Food British Bakeries Ltd
CONTEH Zachariah 35 6 August Worker Hammersmith Food New Covent Garden Food Company
NORDON Cormack 43 1 August worker Tower Hamlets Construction Anord Control Systems UK Ltd
LADJOUZI Yasmin 4 11 August Public Bromley Construction  
POLDEN* Marc 30 23 August Worker   Construction  
ABBOTT Anthony 41 3 September Worker Barking and Dagenham Construction  
ALWYN Kenneth 51 4 September Worker Hammersmith Construction  
BEGUM Zafoora 36 7 September Member of public Redbridge Construction  
HARRIS James 23 14 September Worker Westminster Construction Trident Scaffolding and Cradle Company
QUINN James 56 9 October Worker Merton Construction Self-employed
SABZABADI Esfandiar 50 22 October Worker Merton Electroplating Self-employed
VILVEN Ralph 56 28 October Worker Southwark Railways Balfour Beatty Rail Maintenance
SMITH Nathan 26 12 December Worker Hackney Window Cleaning Kite Contract Cleaning
KIRPSZA Adam 33 14 December Worker Camden Construction Self-employed
CARUANA Joseph 57 19 December Worker Tower Hamlets Transport AEP Aggregates


*Link to Wiltshire cases. Marc died in Salisury Hospital.


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FURTHER DETAILS OF DEATHS


Douglas Whiting

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Douglas Whiting 50 15 March 2001 Worker Islington Construction Costain

Douglas, died when he fell from an internal crane ladder 150 feet to the ground. Health and Safety Executive (HSE) inspectors called to the scene after the death found 15 defects including bent rungs, cracks in the welding and nylon rope used to secure a rung.

Costain had employed an independent safety inspector to inspect the ladder who found eight defects but said that the ladder was fit to use. Mr Banafik, from Allianz Cornhill Engineering said, 'A number of rungs were bent and there were defects. However, none of these caused problems with regard to climbing. The crane was fit to climb and it was not a hazard if you placed your foot in the right spot.'

The inquest took place at the City of London Coroner's Court on 11 February 2002. A 'Misadventure' verdict was returned.

The foreman told the hearing, 'Mr Whiting fell from a great height from a ladder known to have multiple defects.'

HSE inspector, Chris Jopling informed the inquest that 'there were significant problems with the ladder and, after my inspection, I found it unsafe to use. We issued a probation notice requiring the defects to be fixed. While the climbing of the ladder may be second nature for the drivers, such defects can result in lost footing or a slip and result in a fall.'

After the hearing UK Construction Safety Campaigner Tony O'Brien said the area where Douglas died was known infamously as 'murder mile', 14 people having died in previous 12 months.

'There is evidence pointing to defects in the ladder but no culpability is placed on Costain or the subsidiary, Westminster Plant Company. Laws are being broken and people are dying - it is just unacceptable.'


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Allison Fredrick

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Frederick Allison 51 6 April 2001 Worker Bexley Transport Local Council

Frederick died when a car park barrier hit the cleaning vehicle he was driving for the local council.

An inquest took place at London South Coroners Court on 1 February 2002, when a verdict of 'Accidental Death' was returned.


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Stephen Bonner


Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Stephen Bonner 64 28 April 2001 Worker Barking and Dagenham Construction Mead Contractors Ltd


Stephen Bonner died after falling 15 feet from a roof on to concrete while working at the Old Moat House in Abbey Road, in Barking. He was working for the construction company Mead Contractors Ltd of Wood Green in the demolition of the building. He died seven days later in the Royal London Hospital from the serious head injuries he sustained in the fall.

On 30 July 2002, an inquest at East London Coroners Court returned a verdict of 'Unlawful Killing' due to gross negligence.

Coroner Dr Elizabeth Stern said she would be forwarding the case to the Crown Prosecution Service.

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Adedoyin Kassim


Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Nurani Adedoyin Kassim 36 18 July 2001 Worker Croydon Railways Primat Recruitment Ltd

Adedoyin - known as 'Larry' to his friends - died when he was struck by two trains at Purley Station, He was employed by Primat Recruitment Ltd to carry out contract safety work for Amec Rail Ltd. He was standing between two tracks, acting as a lookout for a team of railway workers when a glancing blow from a London-Bound Connex service knocked him into the Gatwick Express.

Rigorous testing was being carried out as rail operators around the country desperately checked for signs of 'cracks' on the line in the wake of the Hatfield tragedy.

An inquest took place on 24 June 2002 at London South Coroner's Court. The jury returned a narrative verdict.

Amec and two of its offshoots were prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) at Croydon Magistrates Court on 29 October 2003 for exposing their staff to safety risks and fined a total of £42,000 .

Amec had pleaded guilty to the health and safety offences. It emerged that Larry and some of his colleagues had been working for 46 consecutive days. The rail industry regulations state that no employee should work for more than 13 days before having a day off.

Dr Debbie Lucas, a psychologist for the HSE, said in her report, 'It is probable that Mr Kassim was suffering from fatigue at the time of the accident. It would have taken him two or three seconds longer to react.'

Stephen Thomas prosecuting for the HSE told the court, 'If proper systems had been in place and there had been proper communication with employees, none of them would have worked these long hours and faced the possibility of fatigue. Serious injury and even death can result from fatigue.'

In June 2006 Adedoyin's widow Sade having sought damages from Primat Recruitment Ltd, Amec Rail Ltd and Network Rail Plc at the High Court in London received £160,000 compensation. Had the case gone to trial, Sade's lawyers would have alleged negligence by his superiors in imposing too heavy a burden of work on her husband.

All three companies denied liability, maintaining they were 'not responsible for the decision made by Mr Kassim to cross when he did'.

Mr Justice Wilkie approved the £160,000 settlement, which was agreed without admission of liability.

Media Coverage
Title Source Date of Article
Dad Killed by Trains Croydon Guardian 26 July 2001
Kassim: Inquest Croydon Guardian 28 June 2002
Rail Death: Firm Breached Safety Rules Croydon Guardian 3 July 2002
Family of rail worker win £160,000 compensation ic South London 30 June 2006

 

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Michael Bellinger

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Michael Bellinger 40 26 Juy 2001 Worker Bexley Food British Bakeries Ltd

Michael, a dispatch clerk, was crushed to death between a baker's lorry and the wall of a loading bay at British Bakeries Ltd at Barnehurst in Bexley Heath

A pallet fell off the lorry as it was pulling away. Michael noticed the fallen pallet and put his head around the side of the lorry to stop the driver. The lorry stopped but then reversed and as a result Michael's head was trapped between the the lorry and the loading bay.

An inquest at London South Coroner's Court on 24 April 2002 returned a verdict of 'Accidental Death'.

British Bakeries Ltd whose brands include such well known names as Hovis, Mothers Pride and Nimble, is the largest subsidiary of the RHM Group. It operates from six sites across the UK with a total of 7000 employees.

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Cormack Nordon


Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Cormack Nordon 43 1 August 2001 Worker/Director Tower Hamlets Construction Anord Control Systems UK Ltd

Cormack, an electrical fitter from Maidenhead, was director of Arnold Control Systems (UK) Ltd. He was crushed to death when an electrical transformer box fell from a crane onto him at a multistory office development at Canada Square in Canary Wharf. At the time Cormack was directing the crane. The principal contractors were Canary Wharf Contractors Ltd.

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) said Cormack was decapitated by the falling box. It launched an investigation with help from the Metropolitan Police. The HSE said that this had been the fifth fatal accident at Canary Wharf in 2001, following the deaths of a a diver and three men who were killed by a falling crane.

A date for an inquest at London Inner North Coroner's Court was set for 24 June 2003 but was subsequently postponed to 3 November of that year when a verdict of 'Accidental Death' was returned.

 

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Zachariah Conteh


Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Zachariah Conteh 35 6 August 2001 Worker Hammersmith Food New Covent Garden Food Company

Zachariah died after half a ton of boiling soup exploded at the New Covent Garden Food Company (which is owned by Daniel Chilled Foods Ltd) when he tried to open the lid of the vat of soup to add some further ingredients. The safety mechanism that should have prevented the lid from being opened was not working.

Colleague Abdullah Saleh was also hit by the blast and spent three weeks in hospital.

An inquest took place on 4 December 2002 at West London Coroner's Court and a verdict of 'Accidental Death' was returned by the jury.

An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) showed the soup had sprayed 30 feet into the air when the vat was opened.

Engineering expert Dr Marc Loyez inspected the vat and concluded the top must have been opened by Zachariah. He said, 'The security system relied on a pressure transducer to tell it what the pressure in the vessel was. I found this had failed and did not work. It is possible Mr Conteh could have opened the lid before the proper time as a result of carelessness or workplace bravado.' He added, 'If the system had been working properly he would not have been able to open the lid. There should have been an audio alarm and a complete shutdown.'

HSE expert Anthony Lees queried how Zachariah could have opened the vat under such high pressure. He said, 'The steam, the noise and the difficulty would have prompted anyone trying to open it to desist.'

Mrs Conteh said after the hearing, 'This was the most appropriate verdict. We are now planning to sue the company.'

Media Coverage
Title Source Date of Article
Worker killed opening soup cooker ThisislocalLondon 6 December 2001
Killer soup cooker had a broken safety system TUC 14 December 2002

 

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Yasmin Ladjouzi

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Yasmin Ladjouzi 4 11 August 2001 Member of public Bromley Construction  

Four year old Yasmin died when a two story scaffold around a block of flats in Bromley collapsed. The premises were owned by Broomleigh Housing Association who contracted Tone Scaffolding to put up some scaffolding. The scaffolding was not cornered off and children played around it. A pulley rope was pulled by one of the children which brought the scaffolding down. There was nothing at the top of the scaffolding to attach it to the building.

Representatives from the Crown Prosecution Service, the Metropolitan Police serious crimes group and the Health and Safety Executive met to decide on whether to issue a corporate manslaughter charge against the scaffolding contractor.

An inquest took place on 17 July 2002 at London South Coroner's Court when a verdict of 'Accidental Death' was returned.

In June 2007 Tone Scaffolding and scaffolder Stephen Armstrong both pleaded guilty to contravening health and safety regulations. Sentencing them at Croydon Crown Court, Judge Simon Pratt said, 'Nothing I can do now or say can bring Yasmin back. Let no one think that any kind of price is being put on a child's life, this case goes no further than the breach of health and safety regulations.'

Tone Scaffolding Services were fined £35,000 for contravening section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 (the HSW Act), with costs of £20,000. Armstrong was fined £5,000 for contravening section 7 of the HSW Act, with costs of £7,500.

Media Coverage
Title Source Date of Article
BLUNDERS THAT COST A TOT'S LIFE Daily Mirror 26 July 2007
Scaffolding firm fined over four-year-old's death Croydon Guardian 14 June 2007

 

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Anthony Abbott

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Anthony Abbott 41 3 September 2001 Worker Barking and Dagenham Construction  

Anthony, a steel erector, died when he fell from a platform at Dairycrest in Dagenham where he was installing a cold storage system.

An inquest on 30 July 2002 at London East Coroner's Court returned a verdict of 'Accidental Death'.

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Kenneth Alwyn

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Kenneth Alwyn 51 4 September 2001 Worker Hammersmith Construction R Bain Scaffolding


Kenneth died when he fell from a scaffold after being hit by a scaffold tube at a property in Hertfordshire. He was flown to Charing Cross Hospital (which is why the death took place in London). Rockley Court Management Ltd, who owned the building, arranged for their agents Marcus King and Co to retain Complete Building Services Ltd to carry out the work, who in turn engaged Bain Scaffolding to erect the scaffolding.

Mr Bain, the director of R Bain Scaffolding supervised the first day of work on site.

An inquest took place at Hammersmith Coroner's Court in July 2002 and a verdict of 'Accidental Death' was returned.

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Zafoora Begum

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Zafoora Begum 36 7 September 2001 Member of public Redbridge Construction  


Zafoora, a member of the public, died when she was walking between roadwork barriers along the A12. A lorry delivering bricks to a construction site hit her as it started and reversed a few metres.

An inquest on 25 April 2002 at East London Coroners Court returned a verdict of 'Accidental Death'. No jury was present.

Zafoora attempted to cross the busy Eastern Avenue (A12) at Gants Hill, north-east London, near an out of use pedestrian crossing. She walked into the works area where a lorry operated by Instalcom, the project subcontractor, was parked. As she waited to cross the road, the lorry was started and slowly reversed a few metres. The driver did not see Zafoora behind the lorry and she was run-over.

HSE inspector, Alec Ferguson, who investigated the incident, said 'Mrs Begum's death could have been avoided. Where drivers of vehicles have a restricted field of view, and particularly when reversing, employers must take effective measures to ensure that persons are not at risk of injury.'

At the time of the incident McNicholas, the principal contractor for the repavement project, had taken a pedestrian light controlled crossing out of action as it was in the middle of the area being repaved. The works area itself was closed off to the public with pedestrian barriers.

The project client had stipulated that no vehicle should reverse unless another person guided it back. When the incident happened, nobody assisted the driver to ensure it was safe to reverse. Had they done so the incident could have been avoided.

McNicholas Plc and Instalcom Limited each pleaded guilty to a breach of Section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act (HSWA) 1974. McNicholas Plc was fined £25,000 and ordered to pay costs of £12,700 to HSE, whilst Instalcom Limited was fined £12,500 and ordered to pay £10,000 costs to HSE.

Media Coverage
Title Source Date of Article
£37, 000 fine following death of pedestrian near construction site HSE 25 May 2004

 

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James Harris

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

James Harris 23 14 September 2001 Worker Westminster Construction Trident Scaffolding and Cradle Company

James fell 12 metres to his death in Oxford Street when he fell from a six inch ledge when he was trying to reach a vertical banner from a building. He was not wearing a helmet or safety harness.

An inquest at Inner West London Coroner's Court on 13th June 2002 returned a verdict of 'Accidental Death'.

A prosecution took place subsequent to this death. Trident Scaffolding and Cradle company pleaded guilty at City of London Magistrates Court and were fined on 28 January 2003 a total of £17,500 for breaching the Health and Safety at Work Act (failing to ensure the safety of employees) plus costs of £2,706.

An article in Safety and Health Practitioner stated:

The court heard how a risk assessment by the company classed the risk of falls from height in this task as 'remote', but did state that employees should wear harnesses when doing the job. However, the employees had not seen the risk assessment and had not been told to wear their harnesses on this job. They were not given any health and safety training by the company, and there was no system of supervision to ensure that the job was being carried out safely, with the appropriate safety equipment being used.

In their sentencing remarks the magistrates said that they considered the training to be deficient and the assessment of the risk of a fall as remote to be 'wholly unrealistic'.

In mitigation, Barry Reynolds, the sole director of Trident Scaffolding and Cradle Company, said it had an excellent safety record and had never been prosecuted before. He maintained that employees were often subject to site induction courses when working on construction sites and were aware of the National Access Scaffolding Confederation guidance note SG4:00. He added that he would have disciplined the employees had he known that harnesses weren't being worn.


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James Quinn

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

James Quinn 56 9 October 2001 Worker Merton Construction Self-employed

James died when he fell off a roof on a house in Springfield Road, SE19 where he was fixing a window.

An inquest at Inner London West Coroner's Court took place on 27 November 2001 and returned an 'Accidental Death' verdict

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Esfandiar Sabzabad


Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Esfandiar Sabzabadi 50 22 October 2001 Worker Merton Electroplating Self-employed

Esfandiar died at the premises of his own electroplating firm as a result of exposure to cyanide

An inquest at Inner London West Coroner's Court on 28 February 2002 returned a verdict of 'Accidental Death
'.

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Ralph Vilven

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Ralph Vivien 56 28 October 2001 Worker Southwark Railways Balfour Beatty Rail Maintenance

Ralph, who was directly employed by Balfour Beatty Rail Maintenance, was hit by a train while working at West Crossing just outside Waterloo Station.

An inquest on 8 October 2002 at London Inner South Coroner's Court returned a verdict of 'Accidental Death'.

The following article in the International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters gives more details of the circumstances of the case and the findings of Railtrack's inquiry:

'Hit by a commuter train travelling at speed the worker (Mr Ralph Vilven) died. Railtrack Southern’s Formal Inquiry concluded that the train driver’s failure to slow down (due to his failure to understand his routing) and consequent high speed of the commuter train led the maintenance worker to conclude that it would progress along the Up Windsor line (a fast approach into Waterloo). In fact the train had been routed off that line via a slow-speed (15 mph) turnout. The train traversed the turnout at some 40 mph, killing the worker. Vilven’s conclusion that the train would enter Waterloo on the Up Windsor line was probably informed by his “mental model” of the Waterloo throat (he had worked on the dense and complex Clapham/Waterloo track system for over thirty years).

According to the Inquiry Report, 'A number of ... staff ... stated that in the position in which [the worker] found himself, they would consider the approach speed of the train as being an important, if not the predominant indication of which route the train was going to take at the turnout in question' (Railtrack Southern 2002, p. 18).

The Formal Inquiry concluded the first 'underlying cause' of the fatality to be, 'The failure of the driver ... to observe correctly the theatre route indicator ... and accordingly to not reduce speed ... ” and the second to be “A failure on the part of [the worker] to recognize which route [the train] was taking ... which in part was almost certainly influenced by the approach speed of the train' (Railtrack Southern 2002, p. 38). Fundamentally the track worker was not negligent. Rather he was 'trapped' by circumstance and the
experience-informed mental model he used to judge the intentions of train drivers.

Media Coverage
Title Source Date of Article
Context is All International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters March 2003

 

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Nathan Smith

Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Nathan Smith 26 12 December 2001 Worker Hackney Window Cleaning Kite Contract Cleaning

Nathan, an industrial window cleaner from Grays, Essex, fell from a fourth floor ledge on the 3 December 2001 while cleaning windows at Curtin Street in London EC2. He died 9 days later on the 12 December.

An inquest at London Inner North Coroners Court took place on 12 June 2003 and returned a verdict of 'Accidental Death'.

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Adam Kirpsza


Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Adam Kirpsza 33 14 December 2001 Worker

 

Construction Self-employed

Adam, a self-employed builder, was killed after falling 2 metres from scaffolding on a house where he was working. There were no eyewitnesses. The incident took place on 10 December. Adam died on 14 December in the National Hospital. Adam had been subcontracted by a friend to work on a £20,000 renovation job on a Victorian-style house in Brixton, for interior decorator Franz Burrows.

An inquest at London Inner North Coroners Court on 27 February 2003 returned a verdict of 'Accidental Death'.

A jury returned a verdict of accidental death in the case of a Polish builder who fell 2m to his death despite the circumstances remaining a mystery.

Health and Safety Executive (HSE) inspectors were unable to carry out a proper investigation at the site because it had 'dramatically changed' by the time they arrived, and those on site also spoke very little English.

Before his fall on 10 December 2001, Kirpsza was hammering broken and cracked bricks and then replacing them around a pipe.

HSE Tony Hetherington said it was not clear how Adam fell. 'When I investigated there were minor problems with the scaffolding but no serious breaches.'

It is believed Adam may have slipped while coming down from his work area.

PC John Bouchard said, 'I was told bricks had fallen on him and then he fell, but I didn't see any bricks at the scene and there were no witnesses.'

The pathologist said the cause of death was head injuries.

 

Media Coverage
Title Source Date of Article
Accidental death verdict in Polish builder case Contract Journal 5 March 2003

 

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Joseph Caruana


Name Age Date of death Status Local Authority Industry

Immediate Employer

Joseph Caruana 57 19 December 2001 Worker Tower Hamlets Transport AEP Aggregates

Joseph, died when - while making a delivery to the RMC Ready Mixed building site in Stepney - he fell out of his cab and was run over by his own lorry, a tipper truck

An inquest was held at the London Inner North Coroner's Court on 5 November 2003. A verdict of 'Accidental Death' was returned.

Back to Table (2001)