A federal judge has sentenced a Philadelphia trucker to 18 months in
prison for falsifying his logbook in connection to a sentence he was
already serving for vehicular homicide.
On May 7, U.S. District Court Judge James Knoll Gardner sentenced
Valerijs Nikolaevich Belovs, 58, on 15 counts of making false statements
in connection with a falsified log book, according to the U.S.
Department of Justice. The Philadelphia judge also fined Belovs $1,000,
levied a $1,500 special assessment and prohibited him from operating a
commercial vehicle without court permission.
In October, Belovs pleaded guilty to the charges for 15 false logbook
entries made in the 13 months leading up to his Jan. 23, 2009 crash.
Three days before the crash, he had left Guadalupe, Calif. with a load
of broccoli bound for South Philadelphia and New Jersey’s produce
markets, according to the U.S. transportation inspector general.
Belovos had kept four logbooks, each falsified to fit possible
situations with authorities. One example cited was that on Jan. 22, he
said he had been in his sleeper berth in Wyethville, Va., when he
actually had been driving to Pennsylvania.
The day of the accident, Belovs had been eastbound on Interstate 76
in Philadelphia when he rounded a curve and encountered stopped rush
hour traffic. His Kenworth rear ended a car, causing a crash chain
reaction for four more vehicles. The driver of the car Belovs hit died,
his passenger sustained serious injuries and four other commuters were
treated at local hospitals.
The Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas sentenced Belovs to 23
months in prison and a $300 fine on April 26, 2010. He had pleaded
guilty to various state charges, including a vehicular homicide
department.
The U.S. DOT’s Office of Inspector General reported that, though the
truck had a seven-week old inspection sticker, the brakes were severely
worn. Belovs drove for Victor Kilinitchii of Philadelphia, who leased
drivers to the three trucks he owned. The sticker had been provided by
Philadelphia’s Pratt Auto, which was owned by Joseph Jadczak Jr. of
Milton, Del.
Belovs had told OIG investigators he had brake trouble on his trip to
and from California. Near, Chicago, he said he telephoned Kalinitchii,
who refused to approve a repair and ordered him to deliver by 1 p.m.
Jan. 23. After that, Belovs contacted Kalinitchii again over steering
problems while braking and the truck owner said he would have the brakes
checked when he returned the truck in Philadelphia.
Later, Kalinitchii and Jadzack told authorities the stickers had been
purchased without inspection or necessary repairs, according to the DOT
inspector general’s office.
The same day Belovs was sentenced, the Montgomery County court
sentenced Kalinitichii to 23 months in prison, a $2,000 fine and $26,000
in restitution, while Jadczak was sentenced to 23 months incarceration
and fined $1000.
Sunday, December 30, 2012
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