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Sometimes the railroad is at fault
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Here's another crossing article where the railroad was found to be at fault: <br /> <br />COURTS <br /> <br /> <br />Jury finds CSX liable in deaths <br /> <br />By TRACY DASH <br /> <br /> <br />A Hancock County jury on Friday awarded more than $5 million to the families of two boys killed in August 1999 when a CSX train rammed into a car in which they were riding. <br /> <br />The jury deliberated for about three hours before returning a verdict in favor of the families of Sean Finegan and Joseph Winningham, both 12. Jurors awarded $2.8 million to Winningham's family and $2.3 million to Finegan's relatives. <br /> <br />Biloxi lawyer Will Denton said court officials have said the damages are believed to be the largest awarded in Hancock County. <br /> <br />Finegan and Winningham, both of Bay St. Louis, were passengers in a 1992 Chevrolet Cavalier driven by 21-year-old Cecile F. Bilbo. Bilbo was crossing the railroad grade at Webb Avenue when the train struck her car. <br /> <br />The case involving Bilbo's death was settled out of court. <br /> <br />A group of at least five lawyers from Denton's firm and a Houston law firm convinced the jury that CSX Transportation, which owns the railroad line, was partially liable. The families' lawyers said Bilbo's car got stuck in a hole along the side of the crossing. <br /> <br />"This crossing had been neglected and allowed to deteriorate," said John Grazier of Houston, who represented the families. <br /> <br />The jury also found that Bilbo and the city of Bay St. Louis shared partial responsibility in the accident. <br /> <br />Although the families' claim did not include the lack of warning devices at the Webb Avenue crossing, their lawyers said crossing gates were installed there after the accident. <br /> <br />CSX could not be reached Saturday for comment. <br />
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