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In reply to the discussion: If you're not able or are unwilling to protest in the streets, please do the actual protestors a favor [View all]benpollard
(261 posts)Willson filed a lawsuit contending that the Navy and individual supervisors were given ample warning of their plan to block the tracks, and that the train crew had time to stop—which the subsequent official Navy report confirmed. The train crew filed a lawsuit against Willson, requesting punitive damages for the "humiliation, mental anguish, and physical stress" they suffered as a result of the incident, which was dismissed. U.S. District Judge Robert Peckham said Willson did not plan to cause the railroad workers any distress, because he assumed the train would stop before hitting him.[4]
Willson agreed in 1990 to settle his lawsuit against the government and train crew for $920,000.[5] He subsequently walks with prostheses and travels locally on a handcycle.
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