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The original was posted on /r/antiwork by /u/DryDeer775 on 2026-04-07 15:43:28+00:00.
One year ago today, Ronald Adams Sr. went to work and did not come home. The 63-year-old skilled trades worker—a machine repairman with 19 years at the Stellantis Dundee Engine Complex in Southeast Michigan—was performing maintenance on an industrial washer in the early morning hours of April 7, 2025, when an overhead gantry crane suddenly activated without warning, plunging down with massive force and crushing his upper torso. He was pronounced dead at Trinity Health Ann Arbor. He is survived by his wife, Shamenia Stewart-Adams, his children and his grandchildren.
Twelve months have now passed. Stellantis has not been held accountable. The United Auto Workers has issued no demands for accountability. And the Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration (MIOSHA), which opened an investigation the day Adams died, has still not released its findings. His family has received not a letter, not a phone call, not a single word of official explanation.
