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Owner of
Detroit-Canada
bridge
ordered
to jail
By ED
WHITE
Associated
Press
DETROIT
- A
judge
ordered
the
84-year-old
owner of
Detroit's
Ambassador
Bridge
to jail
Thursday
for
failing
to meet
court
orders
on a
construction
project
linking
the span
to
adjacent
interstates.
Wayne
County
Judge
Prentis
Edwards
said
Manuel
"Matty"
Moroun
and top
lieutenant
Dan
Stamper
will
stay in
jail
until
they
comply
with a
2010
order to
get the
work
going.
It's
unclear
how long
they'll
be
behind
bars
after an
appeals
court
hours
later
refused
to
suspend
the
decision
and
release
them.
"It is
clear
that the
Detroit
International
Bridge
Co. does
not
intend
to
comply
with the
court
orders
unless
meaningful
sanctions
are
imposed,"
Edwards
said.
Lawyers
for
Moroun
and
Stamper
asked
Edwards
to
freeze
his
decision
while
they
appeal,
but the
judge
declined.
Ken
Mogill,
lawyer
for
Stamper,
said the
judge
was
"absolutely
wrong"
since it
is the
company,
not the
men,
that was
earlier
found in
contempt.
"Neither
Mr.
Moroun
nor Mr.
Stamper
had
received
a notice
that
they
individually
could be
facing
consequences,"
Mogill
said.
"It's
not
enough
that a
company
has been
found in
contempt.
The law
is so
clear."
The
bridge
company
also
must pay
$7,500,
the
maximum
under
state
law for
civil
contempt,
and the
state's
legal
fees.
Moroun,
listed
by
Forbes
magazine
as a
billionaire,
and
Stamper
were
escorted
out of
the
courtroom
by
deputies.
After
getting
an
emergency
request,
the
Michigan
Court of
Appeals
declined
to
release
them
while
the
broader
case is
appealed.
The
three-judge
panel
said
attorneys
cited
the
wrong
law in
their
filings,
although
one of
the
judges
was in
favor of
granting
a stay
and
freeing
the men.
"We are
disappointed
the
court
denied
the
emergency
motion,"
Alan
Upchurch
of Marx
Layne &
Co. said
in an
email on
behalf
of the
bridge
company.
"Everyone
should
be
accorded
due
process
of law
and have
the
opportunity
to
respond
to
clearly
stated
charges,
and that
was not
the case
with
Judge
Edwards'
decision."
Upchurch
said the
company
believes
the
appeal
ultimately
will
succeed.
Moroun's
son,
Matthew
Moroun,
accused
Edwards
of
having a
"personal
vendetta"
against
the
bridge
executives.
"A judge
viciously
lashed
out at
Matty
Moroun
and Dan
Stamper
and
ordered
a
penalty
outside
the
bounds
of a
civil
case
that was
excessive,
unwarranted
and
outrageous,"
the
younger
Moroun
said in
a
statement.
Detroit
International
Bridge
Co. was
declared
in
contempt
of court
in
November
for
failing
to
finish
work on
the
project
linking
the
U.S.-Canada
span
with two
Detroit
interstates.
The
state of
Michigan
sued the
company
after it
failed
to meet
a 2008
deadline
to
finish
its part
of a
$230
million
project
to
improve
traffic
at the
bridge
connecting
Detroit
to
Windsor,
Ontario.
The
company
claims
the
Department
of
Transportation
repeatedly
has
changed
construction
plans
and been
obstructive,
allegations
the
state
denies.
Gregory
Johnson,
MDOT
chief of
operations,
said it
could
take a
year to
get the
work
done.
"We take
no joy
or
satisfaction
in
seeing
these
gentlemen
incarcerated,"
Johnson
said.
"Our
only
goal is
to see
this
contract,
this
project,
completed."
The
hearing
began
with
lawyers
for
Moroun
insisting
he is
not the
real
owner.
They say
a Moroun
trust
has a
minority
stake in
a
holding
company
that
owns the
bridge.
But
state
officials
say
Moroun
clearly
is in
charge,
and the
judge
agreed.
"Mr.
Moroun
has the
power,
the
authority
to make
sure
there is
compliance"
with
court
orders,
Edwards
said.
After a
November
hearing,
state
engineer
Tony
Kratofil
said the
bridge
company
has done
only
"superficial"
work to
follow
the
judge's
previous
orders.
Without
the
improvements,
he said,
trucks
are
stuck
using
neighborhood
roads.
Kratofil
said
Thursday
there's
still a
lack of
progress
on the
project.
The
judge
said he
considered
appointing
a
receiver
or
contractor
to
oversee
the
project
but
determined
it would
only
lead to
more
delays
and
litigation.
An
activist
in the
residential
neighborhood
near the
bridge
complimented
Edwards.
"This is
a win
for the
people,"
Scott
Brines
said.
"This is
not
about
people
going to
jail.
It's
about
bringing
a
solution
to get
trucks
off of
our
neighborhood
streets,
as the
Gateway
development
was
intended
to do."
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