A third person involved in a car accident at this year's All Good Music Festival has sued the organizers, Maryland-based Walther Productions.
The jam band festival, which takes place in July in West Virginia, was accused of negligence in a pair of lawsuits filed earlier this month by two other victims, a young woman who was injured and the father of a young woman who died as a result of the car accident.
In an interview last week, an attorney for the organizers defended the festivalâs safety record. Meanwhile, West Virginia police say a full report on the accident will be completed in the first weeks of November.
The accident took place July 17, when a festival attendee, Clay Harlin Lewin, parked atop a hill lost control of his truck and crashed into a campsite below, killing Nicole Farris Miller, a 20-year-old South Carolina woman; and injuring Yen Ton, who sued the festival earlier this month, and Elizabeth Rose Doran, the latest victim to sue the festival.
The plaintiffs say the festivalâs organizers allowed for an unsafe atmosphere by allowing parking close to the campsite.
In a lawsuit filed with Clarksburgâs U.S. district court, Doran alleges Walther Productions âfailed to exercise reasonable care to preventâ the accident âand to protect all festival attendees of potential injuries resulting from the negligent and reckless act of parking the vehicles on a hill/slope which did not adequately provide traction and protection for the festival attendees.â
Again, Walther Productions, a Maryland-based promoter that often books shows at Rams Head Live, the 8X10 and Washington's 9:30 Club, is named a defendant, alongside president Tim Walther; Marvinâs Mountaintop, where the festival is held; and several of the festival's vendors, including parking and security operators, among others.
Millerâs father, Kim S. Miller, lodged a wrongful-death lawsuit against the festival earlier this month also seeking punitive damages.
Bob Martin, the attorney for Walther Productions, defended organizers against the accusations, saying the festival had strong security measures in place for attendees.
âThey did their best in providing safety measures for their fans,â he said. "Iâve been extremely impressed with the organization, and the preparation on the ground before and during the festival. They had security by stages, people in charge of parking, and provided space for law enforcement.â
Martin also said that organizers have been independently investigating the accident since July, and that they have found out new information that âchanges what everyone thought initially.â
He declined to elaborate.
Preston County Sheriff Dallas Wolfe said West Virginia State Police have completed an accident reconstruction report. The county's prosecuting attorney, Mel Snyder, would then decide to press additional criminal charges.
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