2026年4月16日 / 美国东部时间下午6:22 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
作者:妮可·巴尔德斯
一家为美国军方处理爆炸物的弹药公司面临超过300万美元的罚款,此前田纳西州调查人员在该公司工厂内查出数十项安全违规行为,去年该工厂发生的爆炸造成16人死亡。
10月10日的爆炸摧毁了Accurate Energetic Systems公司位于田纳西州麦克尤恩的工厂内的602号楼,楼内16名员工全部遇难。据调查人员透露,该楼内的员工当时正在处理一条负责“熔铸炸药”的供应链。
一份提交给哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的122页调查报告详细列出了100多项安全违规行为,其中至少44项被归类为“蓄意严重违规”。
田纳西州职业安全与健康管理局的官员表示,在违规行为中,他们有证据显示Accurate Energetic Systems未采取足够预防措施,以防止工厂内处理的可燃蒸气被引燃。该机构表示,公司未能维护危险设备所需的安全信息,并且明显漠视员工安全。
“尽管AES清楚行业标准以及602号楼内公认的爆炸隐患,但仍继续违规运营,配备过多人员、过度占用空间,且存储的爆炸物数量远超安全高效运营所需的最低标准,”调查人员在报告中表示。
“AES未能限制现场人员数量、员工暴露时长以及602号楼运营期间的爆炸物存量,导致员工面临已知的爆炸、火灾和冲击波危险,这表明其明显漠视员工安全,”调查人员称。“AES在没有任何文件证明其符合行业标准的情况下,提高了602号楼的爆炸净重量、人员数量和临时停留限制,公然无视行业规范。”
16名遇难者身份如下:杰森·亚当斯、埃里克·安德森、比利·贝克、亚当·博特曼、克里斯托弗·克拉克、明迪·克利夫顿、詹姆斯·库克、蕾娜·吉拉汉、拉泰莎·梅斯、杰里米·摩尔、梅林达·雷尼、梅利莎·斯坦福、特伦顿·斯图尔特、雷切尔·伍德尔、史蒂文·赖特和唐纳德·尤厄尔。
在发给哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的一份声明中,Accurate Energetic Systems公司首席执行官温德尔·斯廷森对州政府的调查结果提出异议。
“我们认为田纳西州职业安全与健康管理局的调查结果并不代表我们每日 strive to achieve的安全标准,也不符合我们对员工及其家属福祉的承诺,”斯廷森说道。
他表示,公司正在调查爆炸事件,并协助政府调查人员。
“我们失去的这些人是我们社区的核心,”斯廷森说。“他们是我们的朋友和家人,我们因他们的离去而悲痛。我们想念他们,爱着他们,将永远珍藏与他们的回忆。”
代表蕾娜·吉拉汉和史蒂文·赖特家属的律师达伦·里奇表示:“这起事件的方方面面都令人发指。”
他的律所声称这场爆炸并非不可预见,并指出田纳西州职业安全与健康管理局开出的313万美元罚单是田纳西州历史上数额最大的一笔。
“这家公司在2025年拿下了一份价值1.2亿美元的国防部合同,”里奇说。“我认为这些人清楚自己在做什么,他们为了那1.2亿美元的合同,不惜牺牲员工的生命。”
里奇向哥伦比亚广播公司新闻提供了两份 wrongful death 诉讼草案,他的律所计划于本月晚些时候代表吉拉汉和赖特的家属在联邦法院提起诉讼。
本周早些时候,两个遇难者家庭均向Accurate Energetic Systems提出了1.5亿美元的诉讼前和解要求。公司发言人拒绝就潜在诉讼向哥伦比亚广播公司新闻置评。
“我们能说的是,自10月10日起,这场悲剧的遇难者家属一直是我们关注的焦点,”该发言人在一份声明中表示。
里奇表示,公司拒绝了和解要求,并辩称州工人赔偿计划是职场任何伤害的唯一救济途径。里奇还指控公司拒绝向家属提供保险信息。
“迄今为止,AES表达对家属的感谢和支持的行为只有三项:他们在一场为家属举办的活动中提供了烧烤餐车,向家属寄送了印有已故亲人照片的T恤,以及一张50美元的沃尔玛礼品卡。不用说,这太侮辱人了,”里奇说道。
斯廷森表示,公司一直在通过一项救助基金和非营利医疗系统Centerstone提供长期护理和资源。
“在田纳西州中部社区基金会、希克曼/汉弗莱斯县互助援助小组、Centerstone以及我们社区乃至全国数千人的帮助下,我们已经为家属提供了经济救助、悲伤和持续心理咨询、定期送餐、专业服务和咨询渠道,以及日常需求援助等一系列支持措施,”公司发言人告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻。“我们依然为他们失去的亲人而悲痛欲绝。”
Dozens of safety violations found at Tennessee munitions factory after last year’s deadly explosion
April 16, 2026 / 6:22 PM EDT / CBS News
By Nicole Valdes
A munitions company that handles explosives for the U.S. military is facing a fine of over $3 million after Tennessee investigators found dozens of safety violations at the company’s facility where an explosion killed 16 people last year.
The Oct. 10 explosion destroyed Building 602 at Accurate Energetic Systems’ facility in McEwen, Tennessee, killing all 16 employees inside. According to investigators, employees in that building were working a supply chain that handled “melt cast explosives.”
A 122-page inspection shared with CBS News details more than 100 safety violations, with at least 44 described as “willful-serious.”
Among the violations, officials with the Tennessee Occupational Safety and Health Administration said they found evidence that Accurate Energetic Systems had not taken adequate precautions to prevent the ignition of flammable vapors being handled at the facility. The agency said the company also failed to maintain required safety information for its hazardous equipment and demonstrated plain indifference to employee safety.
“AES, despite clear knowledge of the industry standards and recognized explosion hazards in Building 602, continued operations with excessive personnel, unnecessary occupancy, and explosive quantities far beyond the minimum needed for safe and efficient operations,” investigators said in their report.
“AES demonstrated plain indifference to employee safety by failing to limit personnel present, duration of employee exposure, and amount of explosive material present during operations in Building 602 that exposed employees to known explosion, fire, and blast hazards,” the investigators said. “AES increased limits including the net explosive weight, personnel, and transient limits for Building 602 without documented basis demonstrating intentional disregard for industry standards.”
Murat Usubali/Anadolu via Getty Images
The 16 victims were identified as: Jason Adams, Erick Anderson, Billy Baker, Adam Boatman, Christopher Clark, Mindy Clifton, James Cook, Reyna Gillahan, LaTeisha Mays, Jeremy Moore, Melinda Rainey, Melissa Stanford, Trenton Stewart, Rachel Woodall, Steven Wright and Donald Yowell.
In a statement to CBS News, Accurate Energetic Systems CEO Wendell Stinson disputed the state’s findings.
“We believe that TOSHA’s findings do not represent the standard of safety we strive to achieve every day, nor our commitment to the wellbeing of our team members and their loved ones,” Stinson said.
He said the company was investigating the explosion and assisting government investigators.
“Those we lost embodied the very heart of our community,” Stinson said. “They were our friends and family, and we suffer from their loss. We miss them, love them, and will always cherish our memories of them.”
Attorney Darren Richie, who is representing the families of Reyna Gillahan and Steven Wright, said, “Every aspect of this is egregious.”
His firm alleges the explosion was not unforeseeable and notes that the $3.13 million penalty from the state Occupational Safety and Health Administration is the largest in Tennessee history.
“This company took a $120 million Department of Defense contract in 2025,” Richie said. “I believe that these folks knew exactly what they were doing, and they were fine sacrificing their employees’ lives for that $120 million contract.”
Richie provided CBS News with a draft of two wrongful death lawsuits his firm plans to file later this month in federal court on behalf of the Gillahan and Wright families.
Earlier this week, each family demanded $150 million from Accurate Energetic Systems in a prelitigation settlement offer. A company spokesperson declined to comment on the potential litigation to CBS News.
“What we can say is that the families of the victims of this tragedy have been our focal point since October 10,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
Richie said the company rejected the settlement demand and argued the state’s workers’ compensation program is the exclusive remedy for any injury in the workplace. Richie alleged the company also refused to provide insurance information to families.
“To date, the conduct of AES to show their gratitude to the families and support to the families consists of three items: They had a barbecue food truck at an event for the families, they sent a T-shirt with the deceased loved one’s picture on it to the families and a $50 gift card to Walmart. Needless to say, that’s insulting,” Richie said.
Stinson said the company has been providing long-term care and resources through a support fund and the nonprofit health system Centerstone.
“With the assistance of the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, Helping Hands of Hickman/Humphreys County, Centerstone, and thousands of people within our community and from across the country, we have provided financial relief, grief and ongoing counseling, regular food deliveries, access to professional services and consulting, and recurring everyday needs among a host of other support measures,” the company spokesperson told CBS News. “We continue to be devastated for their losses.”
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