Guardrail company fined $663 million for defrauding government

Trinity Industries Inc., manufacturers of a highway guardrail safety system tied to at least nine deaths, was ordered by a judge to pay $663 million for defrauding the U.S. government.

As reported in The Insurance Journal, the decision on June 8 by U.S. District Judge Rodney Gilstrap in Marshall, Texas, caps a three-year legal battle between Trinity and a small competitor in a case that raised doubts about highway safety across the country. The penalty is $138 million more than that imposed last year in a federal trial in which jurors found that Trinity cheated the government by selling its ET-Plus guardrail system without disclosing changes made in 2005. The company plans to appeal.

“We believe the evidence clearly shows that no fraud was committed,” Jeff Eller, a Trinity spokesman, said in an e-mail after the ruling. “The trial court made significant errors in applying the federal law to the plaintiff’s allegations and, therefore, the judgment is erroneous and should be reversed.”

Judge Gilstrap rejected Trinity’s request to throw out the verdict, saying it was supported by “substantial evidence.” His decision followed the unsuccessful end of settlement talks that he ordered after the October verdict against Trinity.Trinity’s shares dropped as much as 2.3 percent in regular trading on news of the collapse of mediation and 2.1 percent more when Gilstrap announced his ruling on penalties.

The rulings come as federal prosecutors in Boston probe the relationship between Dallas-based Trinity and the Federal Highway Administration, which reviews safety tests of highway devices. The FHWA’s sign-off on the ET-Plus has opened up hundreds of millions of dollars in federal tax money to help reimburse states for purchases of the system. In April, U.S. investigators subpoenaed more than a decade’s worth of documents from Trinity regarding the ET-Plus and a predecessor system, the company said in a regulatory filing.

The Texas lawsuit, brought by Joshua Harman, a Trinity competitor based in Virginia, resulted in a jury award of $175 million. The amount was tripled under the federal False Claims Act to $525 million, making it the third largest jury verdict of 2014, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Gilstrap then had to decide whether to impose an additional penalty of anywhere from $5,500 – the minimum allowed under the law – to $184 million, as Harman’s lawyers sought. The judge said he based the penalty on his finding that Trinity made 16,771 false claims to the government.

Harman, who filed the lawsuit on behalf of the U.S. government, will receive 30 percent of the award, or $199 million, Gilstrap said. He will also collect $19 million for legal fees and expenses, payable by Trinity.”We are pleased the Court agreed with the jury’s verdict,” Nicholas Gravante Jr., Harman’s lawyer at Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP, said in an e-mail. “The evidence of fraud in this case could not have been more compelling.”

Trinity is defending other lawsuits. Among them are more than 20 personal-injury cases alleging the ET-Plus is defective, shareholder suits targeting Trinity for inadequate disclosures and claims that the company defrauded states by making the undisclosed changes. Some of the suits allege that the design revisions made the system more likely to malfunction, jamming when hit and piercing through crashing cars instead of helping them slow down.

The FHWA mandated further safety evaluations of the ET-Plus after the Texas trial. The guardrail system passed all eight crash tests, according to the agency, which is currently conducting an analysis of the ET-Plus’s real-world performance.

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