As food enjoyers, we rarely think about the safety of those who bring food to our tables.
But when Dustin Clover’s lawsuit revealed that his injuries resulted from outdated equipment, it cast doubt on agriculture companies like Crookham’s commitment to worker well-being.
An Unsettling Accident in the Fields
In November 2018, Dustin Clover was assigned to monitor irrigation drip tape at Crookham’s seed plot. His task was to sit on a seat at the rear of a drip tape lifter attached to a tractor, signaling the driver to stop when the tape broke. That day, Clover was thrown forward when the driver halted abruptly, causing his arm and torso to be pulled into the machine’s moving rollers. His injuries were severe: fractures, joint damage, and facial abrasions marked only the visible aftermath of a harrowing experience.
A History of OSHA Incidents
This isn’t Crookham’s first encounter with safety concerns. In a 2016 incident, an employee was fatally injured due to insufficient guarding on a seed sorting machine. That tragedy led to a damning report by OSHA, revealing serious violations around machinery guarding and the company’s approach to “lockout-tagout” procedures meant to prevent accidental machine startups during maintenance.
Yet, despite the gravity of the 2016 incident, Crookham did not extend these safety learnings to the drip tape lifter—an oversight Clover’s legal team pointed to as gross negligence. They argued Crookham showed “deliberate ignorance” by failing to consult OSHA regulations in the lifter’s design or conduct any safety evaluations.
Exclusive Remedy Rule and “Unprovoked Aggression” Exception
Central to this lawsuit is Idaho’s Worker’s Compensation Act, which typically restricts employees to workers’ compensation claims alone, shielding employers from civil liability. Clover attempted to invoke an exception within this law—reserved for cases of “willful or unprovoked physical aggression”—to argue that Crookham’s actions constituted a hostile disregard for worker safety. The courts, however, were unconvinced, noting that Clover had not provided sufficient evidence that Crookham acted with specific intent to harm or a conscious disregard for a known hazard.
Limitations of the Law
Unfortunately, the Idaho Supreme Court sided with Crookham, asserting that Clover’s injuries were, regrettably, a consequence of employment risks covered by workers’ compensation.
The court highlighted that no formal complaints had been lodged about the drip tape lifter’s safety since its 2008 deployment and that Crookham’s employee manuals, while outlining general safety policies, did not constitute a specific enough warning of imminent danger.
Clover’s additional submission of expert testimony from Dr. Adam Aleksander, who argued that the machine’s design likely violated basic safety protocols, was excluded due to procedural rules about timing. The court ruled that Clover’s legal team had presented this evidence too late.
So in other words, Crookham won the case on a technicality.
In tiny communities like Caldwell, where job opportunities may be few, workers often feel compelled to accept risky conditions without question. The cost of these risks, both human and economic, tends to fall heavily on workers like Clover, whose physical suffering and years-long legal battle underscore an imbalance in power that remains difficult to redress.
📢 Explore Corporate Misconduct by Category
🚨 Every day, corporations engage in harmful practices that affect workers, consumers, and the environment. Browse key topics:
- 🔥 Product Safety Violations – When companies cut costs at the expense of consumer safety.
- 🌿 Environmental Violations – How corporate greed fuels pollution and ecological destruction.
- ⚖️ Labor Exploitation – Unsafe conditions, wage theft, and workplace abuses.
- 🔓 Data Breaches & Privacy Abuses – How corporations mishandle and exploit your personal data.
- 💰 Financial Fraud & Corruption – Corporate fraud schemes, misleading investors, and corruption scandals.
Crookham’s website is https://www.crookham.com/
They are located at 301 Ware House St, Caldwell, ID 83605
đź’ˇ Explore Corporate Misconduct by Category
Corporations harm people every day — from wage theft to pollution. Learn more by exploring key areas of injustice.
- 💀 Product Safety Violations — When companies risk lives for profit.
- 🌿 Environmental Violations — Pollution, ecological collapse, and unchecked greed.
- 💼 Labor Exploitation — Wage theft, worker abuse, and unsafe conditions.
- 🛡️ Data Breaches & Privacy Abuses — Misuse and mishandling of personal information.
- 💵 Financial Fraud & Corruption — Lies, scams, and executive impunity.
NOTE:
This website is facing massive amounts of headwind trying to procure the lawsuits relating to corporate misconduct. We are being pimp-slapped by a quadruple whammy:
- The Trump regime's reversal of the laws & regulations meant to protect us is making it so victims are no longer filing lawsuits for shit which was previously illegal.
- Donald Trump's defunding of regulatory agencies led to the frequency of enforcement actions severely decreasing. What's more, the quality of the enforcement actions has also plummeted.
- The GOP's insistence on cutting the healthcare funding for millions of Americans in order to give their billionaire donors additional tax cuts has recently shut the government down. This government shut down has also impacted the aforementioned defunded agencies capabilities to crack down on evil-doers. Donald Trump has since threatened to make these agency shutdowns permanent on account of them being "democrat agencies".
- My access to the LexisNexis legal research platform got revoked. This isn't related to Trump or anything, but it still hurt as I'm being forced to scrounge around public sources to find legal documents now. Sadge.
All four of these factors are severely limiting my ability to access stories of corporate misconduct.
Due to this, I have temporarily decreased the amount of articles published everyday from 5 down to 3, and I will also be publishing articles from previous years as I was fortunate enough to download a butt load of EPA documents back in 2022 and 2023 to make YouTube videos with.... This also means that you'll be seeing many more environmental violation stories going forward :3
Thank you for your attention to this matter,
Aleeia (owner and publisher of www.evilcorporations.com)
Also, can we talk about how ICE has a $170 billion annual budget, while the EPA-- which protects the air we breathe and water we drink-- barely clocks $4 billion? Just something to think about....