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News / Northwest

Maker of duck boat in Seattle crash to pay up to $1 million

Manufacturer failed to recall stretch model with defective front axles

By Lewis Kamb, The Seattle Times
Published: December 6, 2016, 10:49pm

SEATTLE — The Missouri-based manufacturer of the amphibious Ride the Duck tour vehicle that crashed on Seattle’s Aurora Bridge last year, killing five people, has agreed to pay up to $1 million in civil fines for violating federal safety regulations, U.S. transportation officials announced Tuesday.

Ride the Ducks International, which built the Duck No. 6 that crashed in Seattle, entered into the federal consent order after admitting it failed to notify federal transportation regulators and issue a recall — as required — of its so-called “Stretch Duck” vehicles after discovering they potentially had defective front axles.

Instead, RTDI inspected and modified the affected vehicles it still owned and issued an October 2013 service bulletin notifying independently owned licensees and other customers that had bought other vehicles subject to the repairs.

Federal investigators later found the local Ride the Ducks of Seattle firm never made the recommended repair to Duck No. 6, which lost control when its axle broke off, then plowed into a bus chartered by North Seattle College, as the vehicles motored across the Aurora Bridge in opposite directions on Sept. 24, 2015.

The crash killed five international students riding in the bus and injured dozens of other people.

The agreement announced Tuesday requires the Branson, Mo., company to pay $480,000 in fines over the next two years, and spend $20,000 on other safety and outreach measures to ensure compliance with federal transportation safety laws. The company will owe another $500,000 if federal investigators find further violations of the agreement or of safety laws.

“Whether in their own car or riding a tour vehicle, American motorists and passengers must be protected from dangerous mechanical defects,” Mark Rosekind, administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), said in a statement announcing the agreement. “This Consent Order sends an important message that NHTSA will continue exercising its authority to protect the public’s safety with all vehicle manufacturers.”

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