helene_t, on 2014-July-24, 05:06, said:
I would say so. What's the point of sending people to prisson for doing their work carelessly? It's not like their peers will start being more carefull in order not to have to go to prisson.
IMO punishment makes the most sense when someone bases an offense on a cynical C/B analysis. Tax evaders and license killers for example. It also is abt to send a signal about what behaviour is officially considered immoral. Animal abuse, for example. And finnally it makes sense to lock up psychotic mass murderers so at least they don't kill anyone while in prisson.
It also makes sense to punish people for unacceptable risky behaviour that does not lead to disasters. Driving while drunk for example. Because even if someone thinks he won't cause any accidents he might still take into consideration that he might end up in prisson anyway.
But punishing people for careless behaviour that happens to cause disasters - I don't see what it achieves.
Now if the relatives of the victims filed civil lawsuits against the engineers (or the enigneers' employers) I would find it more logical.
So in this case, that is not what happens.
It would usually be the corporation that is liable not the employee, unless the corporation could prove it was his negligence, rather than their poor procedures, which caused the problem. For example here, it would appear that the company that employed the engineer should have had some form of review procedures in place that would usually catch this error. People making errors is a normal part of day to day business in every field, and there should be some compliance procedures. So maybe its not even the engineer, its his supervisor who should have caught it. That is why we have management. Besides, "the engineer" doesn't really exists, he is the ceremonial head of a team of lots of people with varying degrees of experience and skill. The same thing happens in software all the time, except that usually no one dies. Usually the CEO will carry the can for not putting the right procedures in place - e.g. the Macondo Oil Spill and Tony Hayward.
If the Scientist was asked in a private capacity, then he can say whatever he likes, like a newspaper columnist. If he was acting in his official capacity as someone in charge of making evacuation decisions, then they should have had some procedure in place both for making a consensus decision among the forecasters, and for communication that decision, and not just put some random guy who appears vaguely qualified in front of a camera. If you do have procedures, and they turn out to be wrong, then we just have to live with it. If they failed to follow the agreed procedure for making reassuring statements, then, and only then, does this court case make sense.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper