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Elevator Safety

An elevator safety expert witness is an individual who specializes in elevators and is called to testify in court cases related to the topic. This type of witness must have comprehensive knowledge about proper elevator maintenance, safety codes, regulations, installation procedures, and other relevant issues. The expert can help a party understand the facts and assess potential liability by providing objective analysis of complex data related to elevator safety. These experts are essential in resolving disputes whose underlying topics may be highly technical or difficult for a layperson to comprehend without help from someone with specialist knowledge.


Elevator safety expert witnesses typically possess either a mechanical engineering degree or have worked as an engineer specializing in elevators and lifts prior to entering the field. They should demonstrate extensive experience working on elevators that meet all applicable standards and regulations, including those from ANSI/ASME A17/17A (American National Standard Institute) Operational Requirements for Electric Elevators & Escalators as well as NFPA 70 (National Fire Protection Association). Additionally, these witnesses must also be knowledgeable about local building codes related to fire prevention measures such as fire rated doors and emergency power supplies so they can offer meaningful testimony regarding associated legal disputes.


While conducting their work on any given case, elevator safety experts often inspect various components involved with the lift including track sets, hoist machinery brake components assembly etc., evaluate design feasibility studies related with lift equipment upgrades set up site visits so they can offer “real time” opinions regarding items under inspection or review already created documents such as drawings plans before providing reports which seek either enforce compliance while maintaining corporate bottom line goals for their client(s). Furthermore these professionals often collaborate with both plaintiff or defendant's counsels during trial depositions ongoing discovery requests collection / analysis of shared evidence additional paperwork review sessions before finalizing judging testimony on behalf of one side over another.

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