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Contractor gets 3 months in prison for Poughkeepsie construction fatality
BY BILL HELTZEL Bheltzel@westfairinc.com
ANew Jersey contractor was sentenced to three months in prison on Friday and his company was fined $218,417 for a violation of safety regulations the led to the death of a worker at a Poughkeepsie job site.
Finbar O’Neill, 57, of Paramus, New Jersey and Onekey LLC of Hackansack, New Jersey, had pleaded guilty to willful violation of federal regulations resulting in death.
“Though technically a misdemeanor,” federal prosecutors said in a sentencing letter, “the defendants committed an extremely serious crime.”
The accident happened in August 2017 at the former A.C. Dutton Lumber Co., 1 Dutchess Ave., Poughkeepsie, where Onekey was building a 300-apartment complex.
An engineer had prepared a plan for piling up and moving dirt around three structures as they were being built, in accordance with U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulations.
O’Neill deviated from the plan by ordering workers to build a temporary concrete block wall to hold back the soil. About 15 feet of soil was piled up and heavy machinery was driven over the pile.
Several people at the site, according to court records, advised O’Neill that the wall was unsafe. He ignored the warnings.
The wall collapsed and crushed Maximiliano Saban, a native of Guatemala and the father of two children, and injured another worker. Both were employed by a subcontractor, New Generations Masonry, Hartford, Connecticut.
O’Neill’s attorneys recommended probation as an appropriate punishment, in a sentencing memorandum submitted to U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul E. Davison in White Plains federal court.
“His disregard of the OSHA regulation was an aberration and in no way reflective of the care he has for his employees’ safety,” attorneys Scott A. Resnik, Michael M. Rosensaft and Jake A. Nussbaum wrote.
His lawyers and numerous support letters depict a man who has devoted his life to family, community, employees and the needy.
He was born on a sheep, cattle and potato farm in Pomeroy, Ireland, and immigrated to the U.S. when he was 19.
He started out in a carpentry business and with his wife, Paula, went on to develop Onekey, a successful general contracting enterprise.
He helped other immigrants from Ireland find success in the U.S. He supported missions in Africa, India and Sri Lanka.
The Rev. Prince Robert Bellarmine, a Catholic priest, praised O’Neill’s support for a jungle mission in Sri Lanka and for daycare for children and clean drinking water in India.
He routinely helped with construction projects at his parish center and for individuals who needed help. He contributed to the Child Abuse Prevention Center and other charities.
He helped a quadriplegic man fulfill a lifetime dream of visiting Ireland and Medjugorje, a Catholic pilgrimage site. The irony, his lawyers wrote, is that the wall was built to protect workers.
When the accident happened he tried to rescue the victim.
He hosted a vigil at the job site for Saban’s family, covered the cost of the wake and funeral and repatriation of the body to Guatemala.
Onekey has paid a $281,583 civil penalty to OSHA, and O’Neill and Onekey have settled a lawsuit with the family for $2.8 million.
To this day, his children told the judge, he is devastated and distraught over the death.