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Accident at Gröna Lund - Jetline permanently closed update page 6

The charges for this accident have just been revealed. The main component at fault was the load bearing upstop arm. It was manufactured badly, broke and caused the accident. The prosecutors in the case are pursuing significant penalties for the three companies involved in the tragic accident at Gröna Lund amusement park. Specifically, they are seeking corporate fines totalling 18 million SEK, divided as follows:

Gröna Lund: Prosecutors are asking for 12 million SEK in fines, the highest portion, as they view the amusement park as having significant responsibility for the accident. Gröna Lund allegedly provided inadequate technical documentation and instructions for the manufacturing of critical components and failed to inspect the delivered parts despite visible defects.

Mölndal Company: The company Gröna Lund subcontracted for assembly of the load bearing upstop arm faces a proposed fine of 3 million SEK. This company played a central role in ordering the load-bearing arms but failed to perform sufficient quality checks or inform its subcontractor in Gothenburg of critical end-use information. The Mölndal company subcontracted the assembly to a Gothenburg company without informing Gröna Lund or the subcontracted company out of fear that Gröna Lund would in the future go directly to the Gothenburg company for future orders.

Gothenburg Company: The second subcontractor, responsible for manufacturing the defective parts, also faces a proposed fine of 3 million SEK. This company reportedly lacked the necessary competence and certifications to produce parts for amusement park rides, employed an unlicensed welder, and did not seek clarification about unclear instructions they received. This company did not even know they were ordered to manufacture a part for an amusement ride.

The prosecutors allege gross negligence by all three companies, which led to the accident resulting in one fatality, three severe injuries, and additional minor injuries. If these fines are imposed, they would rank among the highest corporate penalties ever issued in Sweden. These fines are intended to hold the companies accountable for their collective failures in adhering to safety regulations and ensuring the quality of parts used in amusement park rides. Liseberg have confirmed that they will keep Lisebergsbanan open and that they have always ordered their parts from official Schwarzkopf suppliers.
 
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Prosecutors are not very sharp, are they?

It's my writing that isn't. I summarised and translated a pretty long Swedish article. Let's rephrase it.

The manufacturer did not know they were creating a part for an amusement ride but anyways lacked the necessary competence and certifications to produce parts for amusement park rides. That still does not excuse them from accepting incomplete instructions and producing a faulty part. You get what I mean?
 
An update. Gröna Lund are rejecting the charges. Their lawyer stated that Gröna Lund didn't commit a crime and shouldn't pay anything. They don't want to go more into detail due to the pending legal battle.

Now to the opinion phase. I find this pretty stupid by Gröna Lund. The Swedish Accident Investigation Authority have written a pretty thorough report pretty clearly blaming Gröna Lund for the accident. Gröna Lund ordered non certified parts from non certified suppliers being given lacking instructions and not inspecting these parts before install. Take it on the chin, pay the fine, apologise and learn from it. They might possibly reduce the fine but they are never getting out of the blame. Keeping this in the press for another year might hurt them more.
 
If these fines are imposed, they would rank among the highest corporate penalties ever issued in Sweden.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but is 18 million SEK really that much in this context? It's less than two million dollars. Recall that Funtime was fined $310 million for their involvement in an accident in Florida recently. Would this really be one of the biggest fines incurred by a company in Sweden?
 
Correct me if I'm wrong, but is 18 million SEK really that much in this context? It's less than two million dollars. Recall that Funtime was fined $310 million for their involvement in an accident in Florida recently. Would this really be one of the biggest fines incurred by a company in Sweden?

Sweden is very conservative regarding company fines. The record fine was 14 million SEK given out earlier this year to a forestry company. Otherwise fines rarely go over 10 million SEK.

The 18 million SEK (about 1.6 million USD) is very small compared to what Funtime is charged. The Jetline accident involved a lot more people than the Orlando accident and arguably Gröna Lund shares a higher blame than Funtime.
 
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Yeah, I still don't get why Funtime was considered at fault. Their product worked as intended until the park decided - on it's own, to modify the safety features. Funtime didn't even know about these changes until the accident happened.

Whilst Gröna Lund has knowingly ordered parts from a third party manufacturer to safe some money.

Ok, on the other hand, the US legislation is notorious for crazy high fines.
 
I think Klarna wants a word. They were fined 500 million SEK (~ €43 million) this week by Finansinspektionen (the Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority).

That wasn't a fine due to a criminal court conviction. It was a sanction fee ordered by Finansinspektion. Klarna did not commit a crime. These are different things.
 
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