LOS ANGELES PERSONAL INJURY LAW FIRM
SANTA MONICA, Calif., April 27, 2016/ - Attorneys with the Santa
Monica Law Firm Greene Broillet & Wheeler, LLP announced
Monday the $4,020,000 settlement of a wrongful death lawsuit
filed on behalf of the family of CJ Saraceno, a man killed after
he fell out of a party bus and into traffic on the 101 Freeway
near Studio City.
Attorneys Christine Spagnoli and Christian Nickerson represented
the Saraceno family. The party bus, owned by the Hyros
Corporation, was poorly maintained and had been cited by the CHP
for safety violations 5 months before the September 2013incident,
but was still in operation without repairs even after it was
ordered off the road, Spagnoli said.
"The compressor that was supposed to keep the door to the bus
closed while it was moving on the freeway wasn't functional,"
Spagnoli said. "They knew or should have known about the problem,
didn't fix it, and it cost CJ Saraceno his life."
The pneumatic door system that failed is designed to provide
enough air pressure to ensure the bus doors remain closed when
the vehicle is moving. Discovery revealed that Hyros negligently
maintained the bus and its component parts and this failure to
safely transport its passengers resulted in a preventable
tragedy.
"It's something that should never have happened," said Chris
Saraceno, father of the 24-year-old victim.
Saraceno had moved to California from his native Connecticut and
was working for a digital design agency. He was out celebrating a
birthday with friends on the bus, which was traveling south on
the 101 Freeway near Universal Studios Drive, the night he was
killed. Other passengers on the bus say Saraceno was standing
near the front, changing the music on the radio when the bus
swerved and Saraceno lost his balance, falling down the stairway
and through the door.
Friends tried to grab him as he slipped down the stairway to the
exit, and Saraceno attempted to hold on to a handle and the
bottom step, but he fell out of the bus onto the freeway and was
hit by several cars.
The case exposed the gaps in enforcement of safety regulations
for limo companies that maintain and operate these types of
vehicles.