• cobra89@beehaw.org
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    10 months ago

    Okay, since everyone here seems to have a fundamental misunderstanding of how this process works.

    It is a normal and usual thing for companies to hire an outside law firm to independently and unbiasedly have them create a report about how something happened. This is why the report is hosted on the law firm’s website. So no one can claim that the company that ordered the investigation altered it in any way or manipulated the findings.

    Do you all really think law firms would risk their reputations by purposefully changing or omitting something from their report that they’re going to publish for the whole world to see? Especially when it can easily be found out they lied if the topic at hand ever gets to the discovery phase during a trial?

    This is how this works, Hockey Canada did the same exact thing for the 2018 world junior sexual assault case after the London Ontario police had already dropped all charges. And once that report was concluded the police took the information they gathered and used it to reopen the case and file new charges.

    It’s better that the company accused of the wrong doing is paying for the law firm to do the investigation. Would you rather tax payers pay for it through the regulators having to do an investigation? And many times the regulators are hamstrung by resource restraints or limits on their ability to investigate. A law firm specifically hired to investigate something for a company has none of those restrictions. And if the company refuses to give them access to what they feel is critical information then the law firm discloses that in their report.

    Could the Verge have worded this a little more critically? Sure. But you’re all out here pretending a law firm is gonna doctor their report for the company that hired them and that’s just not how this works.

    • earthquake@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      Yes, it’s normal to hire independent investigations, and I’m not sure why Verge worded it this way (sarcasm?), the actual 200 page report contains a lot of condemnation of Cruise…but inconsistently. The report does seem to massage the situation in favor of Cruise in several places.

      I’ve only read about 30 pages of the report, but I don’t see it anywhere consider whether the connectivity issues were intentional, despite Director Matt Woods streaming the video from his home computer (!?) in three consecutive meetings without trying to fix the issue or have someone else play it (it was available to everyone via Slack, including Cruise execs who were in-person at the meetings).

      In fact, on page 54 it says he just paused it before the dragging happened: “Cruise expected and intended its October 3 meeting with NHTSA to follow its past practices in which Cruise employees would show a video of an accident or incident and respond to regulators’ questions based upon what they observed in the video. But this did not happen for at least two reasons. There were internet connectivity issues and the Director of System Integrity Wood paused the video at the point of impact, and then never resumed playing it.”

      Despite simply pausing the video at the moment of impact, the summary on page 13 says: “Virtual meeting with NHTSA representatives. Wood shows Full Video, again having internet connectivity issues causing video to freeze and/or black-out in key places including after initial impact.”

      Page 61-63 shows that there’s debate whether they even showed the DMV the full 45s video or a 12s one that cuts before the dragging, with Cruise employees recalling both possibilities. Quinn Emanuel even hired an engineering consulting company to do forensics on Wood’s home PC, which concluded: “It is not possible to verify [which video he showed]”.

      Yet, the summary of that meeting: “Cruise holds hybrid in-person and virtual meeting with DMV and CHP representatives. Wood shows Full Video”

      These summaries seems extremely charitable to the point of inaccuracy, to me!

      EDIT: extremely tangential but I find it funny that Quinn Emanuel founder John Quinn’s wikipedia proudly announces that he has a podcast where he has interviewed, among others, NYC Mayor Eric Adams and Depp’s lawyer Camille Vasquez.

      • self@awful.systems
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        10 months ago

        I’ve only read about 30 pages of the report

        holy fuck, thank you for doing the legwork on this. the details are fascinating as a case study in how “independent” investigations launder details like this; something that we (obviously excluding our guest gentleposter in this assessment) knew was happening from the general stench of what we’ve seen coming out of Cruise, but it’s still fun to see the company’s strategy of lying like a 5 year old except about a major public safety risk continue to fall apart

        • earthquake@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          The report is a grim but fascinating read.

          “Also talked to [a CHP official] for about 30 minutes this evening. He said they felt like they were ‘punked’ but also got him to a place where he said I am still your advocate, I believe in this technology, both of us could have done better here and we should pay more attention and @Matthew Wood’s verbal walk through as he did today is as helpful as it is to see the video. TLDR - we got to a good place - and he apolgized [sic] but felt like he needed to say what the team was thinking. It’s a good lesson to us that they rely on us a lot more than we anticipate and the trust that we’ve built us great but it’s fragile just as all relationships. We rehabilitated the dynamic I believe.”

          CHP = California Highway Patrol. Complete farce of a system.

    • sc_griffith@awful.systemsOP
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      10 months ago

      I’m a grad student. Last year I wrote the proposed article in our union contract concerning discrimination and harassment grievances.

      As part of this I went and looked at a bunch of actual cases in which universities covered for malefactors. Commissioning “independent” law firms who proceeded to generate whitewashed bullshit reports was often a key step in trying to shut down victims, enough so that I included language specifically targeting this tactic (I’m too lazy to go get the link but if you feel like digging through legal documents you can check out the first proposed revision of article IX in the Brown university contract with GLO). this absolutely happens