Footage shows labourer who was killed in industrial shredder
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Horrifying footage shows the moment a labourer was killed when he fell into an industrial shredder.
David Willis, 29, tumbled into a shredder designed for wood and commercial waste at Timmins Waste Services (TWS), in Wolverhampton.
CCTV from the tragedy on September 15, 2018, shows Mr Willis being hoisted up to the machine on a JCB digger's grapple arm.
His boss, yard manager Brian Timmins, was in the cab of the digger and had told Mr Willis to clear a blockage in the shredder while it was running.
Mr Willis knelt on the edge of the machine but as he reached down he fell inside and was killed instantly by the huge meshing blades.
The remains of David Willis (pictured) , 29, were never found after he fell inside a machine designed for shredding wood and commercial waste at Timmins Waste Services (TWS) in Mander Street, Wolverhampton, on September 15, 2018
Brian Timmins, 54, of Albrighton in Wolverhampton, was found guilty of manslaughter and the company guilty of corporate manslaughter
Footage shows Timmins climb up to the top of the hopper and peer inside before walking away from the scene and pull out his mobile phone.
Prosecutor Christine Agnew KC said CCTV evidence showed the machine was still operational at the time but should have been turned off.
He then called Mr Willis' number before climbing back inside the digger and continued working - meaning the labourer's remains were buried in shredded waste.
When Mr Willis disappeared inside the machine, Timmins was seen on CCTV looking around the yard and 업소용 음식물처리기 inside the shredder's 'hopper', which guides the waste towards the machine's blades, before calling Mr Willis's phone.
David Willis, 29, tumbled into a shredder designed for wood and commercial waste at Timmins Waste Services (TWS), in Wolverhampton.
CCTV from the tragedy on September 15, 2018, shows Mr Willis being hoisted up to the machine on a JCB digger's grapple arm.
His boss, yard manager Brian Timmins, was in the cab of the digger and had told Mr Willis to clear a blockage in the shredder while it was running.
Mr Willis knelt on the edge of the machine but as he reached down he fell inside and was killed instantly by the huge meshing blades.
The remains of David Willis (pictured) , 29, were never found after he fell inside a machine designed for shredding wood and commercial waste at Timmins Waste Services (TWS) in Mander Street, Wolverhampton, on September 15, 2018
Brian Timmins, 54, of Albrighton in Wolverhampton, was found guilty of manslaughter and the company guilty of corporate manslaughter
Footage shows Timmins climb up to the top of the hopper and peer inside before walking away from the scene and pull out his mobile phone.
Prosecutor Christine Agnew KC said CCTV evidence showed the machine was still operational at the time but should have been turned off.
He then called Mr Willis' number before climbing back inside the digger and continued working - meaning the labourer's remains were buried in shredded waste.
When Mr Willis disappeared inside the machine, Timmins was seen on CCTV looking around the yard and 업소용 음식물처리기 inside the shredder's 'hopper', which guides the waste towards the machine's blades, before calling Mr Willis's phone.
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