The ABS system was not working in eight out of 18 vehicles tested by Bus Éireann four days after a crash in which five Meath schoolgirls were killed.
A jury at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court has heard that Bus Éireann provided documents to gardaí showing that tests carried out on the vehicles on May 27th, 2005 also concluded that seven of the buses had the bulb removed from a warming lamp on their dashboards.
This light indicated to a driver if there was a fault with the ABS system.
The jury also heard on day-four of the trial that two years before the fatal crash the Department of Transport circulated a letter to all “heavy good vehicle testers” stating that the ABS warning lamps “must be tested” before road-worthiness could be established. The Department said this regulation was in place since 1992.
One of the companies on trial for breaches of the Health and Safety Act arising from the investigation into the crash has pleaded guilty to a new charge.
Sonya Kelly, company secretary, pleaded guilty on behalf of Keltank Ltd of Balbriggan that being aware that ABS sensor leads were disconnected it failed to ascertain whether a hazard arose as a consequence thereof before returning the bus to the driver, Mr John Hubble, on May 5th, 2005.
The company had previously denied two charges of failing to undertake necessary maintenance and repair of the ABS system on the bus on May 6th, 2005.
Judge Patrick McCartan adjourned the case of Keltank to Friday next when it will be mentioned before him.
Mr Brendan Grehan SC, prosecuting, said the trial would proceed in relation to McArdles Test Centre Ltd from Dundalk and that at the end of the hearing a nolle prosequi would be entered in relation to the two original charges faced by Keltank.
Mr Joe McArdle, a director, has pleaded not guilty on behalf of McArdles, to two charges of failing to note the ABS warning light on the bus was not operational while conducting a vehicle test on March 15th, 2005, two months before the tragedy.
Mr Alan Turner, a technician whose company, Wabco, supplied the ABS system on the bus, told Mr Grehan he inspected it four days after the crash and found it was not working. He said he noticed that one cable was visibly disconnected from the electronic control unit which he described as the brain in the system.
He also said that the ABS warning light was not operating on the bus but accepted in cross-examination by Mr Roderick O’Hanlon SC, defending McArdles, that he could not say if the light was working when the vehicle was tested by McArdles in March 2005.
Mr Turner told Mr Grehan that cables connecting wheel sensors and modulators, positioned on each wheel, were not connected to an electronic control unit (ECU) as they should have been.
He said that the ABS system was not the brakes but it stopped the wheels from locking and if it was not operating properly, the normal braking system would still operate.
He told Mr Grehan that cables connecting the sensor on the right rear wheel to the ECU was visibly disconnected, while the cables connecting the left rear wheel and the left front one were also broken but he could not physically see the breaks.
Mr Turner said he found 11 faults in the ABS system, recorded by the ECU. Two of the faults were still current while the remainder were recorded as inactive.
Sergeant Alf Martin told Mr Grehan that the gardaí were supplied with the Department of Transport letter in November 2003.
It stated that the Department had been made aware that a number of authorised testers “may not be testing the ABS warning lamps”. It said that this system was important in all HGV vehicles and the warning lamp “must be tested”.
It said that those testers which failed to carry out every single aspect of the road-worthiness test would leave themselves open to sanction.
Sgt Martin said that on June 28, 2005 he also received a copy of a testers manual for heavy good vehicles which said that if an ABS system had been fitted to a vehicle the warning lamp must be checked.
It stated that if a red light appears in the warning lamp on the vehicle’s dashboard at speeds over 7 km/h it indicated that there was a fault in the ABS system.
The manual advised that the ABS system might only be repaired by a mechanic authorised by the manufacturer but stated that the vehicle might still be driven because even if the ABS system was not functioning, the standard brakes would still work effectively.
Sgt Martin told Mr Grehan that he visited Mr Hubble, the injured bus driver, in hospital and asked him about the crash without being formally introduced. He said Mr Hubble 0mentioned that “the gardai would find out if there was something wrong with the brakes”.
Sgt Martin said he met the CIE maintenance manager at Broadstone and was given various documents to assist with the crash investigation, including a number of checklists dealing with parts of the bus involved.
One of these was a SH2(A) form containing a list of bus parts tested and ticked off by mechanics on June 7, 2005. He was given similar checklist documents dating from March 2005 to November 2004.
Sgt Martin said the maintenance manager also gave him a number of SH3 forms dating from 2004 to 2005 which detailed the estimates of maintenance work done on the bus. He also took certificates of road-worthiness for the bus dating back to 2000, some of them issued by McArdles.
Sgt Martin told Mr O’Hanlon that he never visited McArdles Test Centre. He agreed that a testing centre is not responsible for repairing a vehicle. It’s role was to identify “fail items” which it then reverted to the garage where the faults should be repaired.
Sgt Martin also accepted that McArdles were dealing with the testing of the bus involved in this accident while Keltank was responsible for its upkeep.
The trial continues before Judge McCartan and a jury of five men and seven women.