dolphingirl47
In Search of the Tag Fairy
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2007
- Messages
- 31,283
First off, criminality has a much higher burden of proof which must be met. Second, why shouldn't those who suffered the loss be the ones in some minimal way compensated? The reality is that, as with any business, the best way to ensure accidents don't happen twice is for them to have to pay (literally) for the ones that do happen.
Well, I was brought up with the concept of "innocent until proven guilty". If they cannot make criminal charges stick, the there should be no grounds for any civil lawsuit.
The thing is, at the moment, we simply do not know what caused this terrible and tragic accident. From the article that I read, it looks like that cutting costs and thereby cutting corners might well be the reason or at least might have contributed. The result of the investigation could be a completely different one. It could be a mechanical failure that nobody could have foreseen. It could be genuine human error or it could be negligence of an employee rather than Disney as a corporation.
In any case, it would be fairly unlikely that this would ever get anywhere near a court house. I would expect Disney to settle out of court without ever admitting any guilt (if they are in fact guilty), take the moral high ground and change precisely nothing. Actually, they might changes something: they might make even more cuts as the money for the settlement has to come from somewhere.
You say that is is only the fear of lawsuits that make the big corporations act. I am not too sure about this. I think with this sue happy culture, big corporations know that they can buy themselves out of just about any spot of bother.
Corinna