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hatrack

(59,587 posts)
Sun Jan 2, 2022, 11:12 AM Jan 2022

Appeals Court Upholds Six-Figure Judgment Against Coal-Rolling Truck Retrofit Shop In Utah

A federal appeals court has upheld a six-figure penalty levied against the stars of the “Diesel Brothers” monster truck television show for altering emission control systems in trucks, resulting in unnecessary air pollution in Utah. But the 53-page ruling released Tuesday came with caveats that will put the matter back in the Salt Lake City courtroom of U.S. District Judge Robert Shelby for further proceedings.

The underlying case was brought not by state regulators but by the environmental group Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment (UPHE). The appeals court affirmed the right of private groups to bring action against polluters for alleged violations of the Clean Air Act. “We are a step closer to clean, healthy air in Utah thanks to this decision,” said Salt Lake City anesthesiologist Brian Moench, UPHE’s president. “The appeals court’s ruling today has broad implications. It is a victory for public health protection, for preserving the rule of law, and for the right of citizens to pursue punishment of any company that might have a similar business practice that disregards the rights of citizens to breathe clean air.”

David “Heavy D” Sparks and his associates at Sparks Motors LLC illegally sold or retrofitted at least 31 diesel trucks with equipment that disabled required emission control systems, according to the group’s suit. Some of these so-called “defeat parts” allowed drivers to release huge plumes of black exhaust in a practice known as “rolling coal.”

EDIT

To build its case against Sparks, Utah Physicians had purchased a truck Sparks had altered, a 2013 Ford F-250, for $43,000 and had its emissions levels tested. The vehicle released 36 times more pollutants than had been its emission-control system been working properly, according to evidence presented at trial. “It was a classic coal roller. You step on the gas and out comes a big cloud,” said the group’s lawyer Reed Zars, a lawyer representing UPHE. The catalytic converter, diesel particulate filter and other controls had been removed. “It had been ‘straight piped,’ given what they call a full delete. You just see like a sewer pipe going from the manifold back to the rear of the truck,” Zars said. “Curiously, the price seems to go higher, the less it has on it for emissions control.” The group had to spend $8,500 to restore those controls before reselling the truck.

EDIT

https://www.sltrib.com/news/environment/2021/12/29/appeals-court-affirms/

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Appeals Court Upholds Six-Figure Judgment Against Coal-Rolling Truck Retrofit Shop In Utah (Original Post) hatrack Jan 2022 OP
If rolling coal is captured on your dash cam, multigraincracker Jan 2022 #1
$10,000 sounds like a nice round number . . . . hatrack Jan 2022 #2
I think I saw where the multigraincracker Jan 2022 #3

multigraincracker

(32,680 posts)
1. If rolling coal is captured on your dash cam,
Sun Jan 2, 2022, 12:09 PM
Jan 2022

can it be turned over to the EPA to bust them?
They need to pay a reward for doing it.

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