Tag Archives: GrandForksScandal

Williston Teacher Abandoned: Left High and Dry for 24 Hours at Deadly Closed Grand Forks Amtrak Station

## 🛑 Stranded and Ignored: The Amtrak Grand Forks Station Scandal


**By Daniel J Leach Jr of Courtroom Watchdog**
*Published: June 28, 2026*

Williston Teacher Abandoned: Left High and Dry for 24 Hours at Closed Grand Forks Amtrak Station

By Daniel J Leach Jr of CourtroomWatchdog.com

Listen to podcast discussion about this subject of Kathy Mita and the Grand Forks Amtrak station fumbled service.
Published: June 28, 2026
Imagine your Mother, Sister, Daughter or even yourself being a vulnerable public school teacher, left entirely high and dry in the middle of nowhere under the most grueling conditions imaginable. That is exactly what happened this morning to Kathy Mita, a dedicated educator from Williston, ND, due to a cascading chain of institutional failures by Amtrak staff from Fargo to Grand Forks.
This wasn’t just a minor logistical oversight—it was a 24-hour nightmare born out of absolute bureaucratic indifference.

The Setup: Misinformation and Refusal of Service in Fargo

The ordeal began long before the train even pulled out of the station. Kathy took every responsible step to ensure a smooth journey:

  • The Phone Call: She called ahead to the Fargo depot to verify the ticketing process and was explicitly told she only needed to arrive 20 minutes prior to departure to purchase her ticket.
  • The Arrival: Diligent and cautious, Kathy arrived at the Fargo station a full hour before departure—well ahead of the window she was given.
  • The Refusal: Despite being an hour early, the ticket agent on duty flatly refused to sell Kathy a ticket, claiming she was “doing luggage” and could not handle a ticket sale.
    Left with no choice but to board or be left behind in Fargo despite her best efforts to pay, Kathy got on the train. While en route, she remained actively on the phone, sitting on hold for an extended period trying desperately to reach Amtrak customer service to process her payment over the phone.

The Expulsion: Kicked Off in a Dangerous Regional Storm

Instead of showing basic customer service or human decency, the train conductor treated her like a trespasser. Because she didn’t have physical cash on hand and was still trapped on hold trying to pay Amtrak directly, the conductor forcibly removed her from the train in Grand Forks.
Desperate for a solution, Kathy asked if she could be permitted to ride to the next major layover in Minot, where she could utilize the depot ATM to withdraw cash and settle the fare. The staff gave her another flat, unyielding “No,” and abandoned her on the platform.

Left High and Dry in Grand Forks

This elderly passenger was left stranded at an unstaffed, locked station, forced to face a grueling 24-hour wait for the next scheduled train because local ground transit options were unavailable. To make matters worse, this occurred while the region was being battered by a severe thunder and lightning storm—all while trapped under a brutal, suffocating regional heat advisory.
The Grand Forks Amtrak station is notoriously a locked, unmanned facility. For Kathy, this meant:

  • No Shelter: Zero access to the indoor climate-controlled waiting area during a dangerous electrical storm and severe heat.
  • No Basic Amenities: No access to running water, public bathrooms, or emergency communication lifelines.
  • Isolation: The station is located over a mile away from the nearest commercial service or gas station, leaving a stranded traveler completely isolated.
    When we talk about institutional neglect, we aren’t just talking about paperwork errors. We are talking about real human lives left in actively dangerous, life-threatening environments due to a systemic lack of accountability. Operating an unmanned transit station in extreme weather without adequate shelter, power backups, or human assistance—while actively dumping paying passengers into the storm—is a glaring liability and a catastrophic failure of a public utility’s duty of care.
    Courtroom Watchdog is stepping up to demand answers, transparency, and structural change. We are calling out the negligence, exploring the legal ramifications of this failure, and putting the pressure where it belongs: on the officials who let this happen.

đź“© Action Alert: Demand Accountability Now

Below is an advocacy email template you can copy, fill out, and send to North Dakota state officials, transportation authorities, and local leadership to demand immediate changes to passenger safety protocols.
Subject: URGENT: Public Safety Failure, Conflicting Information, and Gross Negligence at Fargo and Grand Forks Amtrak Stations
Dear [Official Name],
I am writing to you today to express my deep concern and outrage regarding the harrowing incident this morning, June 28, 2026, involving a Williston public school teacher who was systematically failed by Amtrak personnel and left stranded at the Grand Forks station.
The passenger followed all corporate directives, calling ahead to the Fargo depot and arriving an hour early, only to be refused a ticket by staff who prioritized luggage handling over passenger service. Despite actively attempting to pay via phone while on board, and requesting a brief accommodation to access an ATM during the upcoming Minot layover, she was forcibly removed from the train by the conductor.
Leaving a vulnerable passenger stranded at a locked, unmanned transit station under extreme weather conditions—without basic safety nets, climate-controlled shelter access, running water, or on-site personnel—is a severe failure of public safety and a direct violation of the duty of care owed to travelers.
As a community member and supporter of public accountability, I demand that your office take immediate action to:

  1. Investigate the operational and personnel failures at the Fargo and Grand Forks stations that led to a traveler being actively denied service and abandoned.
  2. Implement mandatory emergency safety protocols, including ensuring locked stations provide external emergency shelter or communication links when regional heat or storm advisories are active.
  3. Establish strict oversight for transit operations within our state to ensure that the elderly, vulnerable, and everyday travelers are never exposed to hazardous environmental conditions due to staff negligence.
    We are actively watching how local and state leadership responds to this crisis. Public trust requires immediate corrective action and absolute transparency.
    I look forward to your prompt response detailing the concrete steps being taken to resolve this dangerous issue.
    Sincerely,
    [Your Name]
    Supporter, CourtroomWatchdog.com

đź“‹ North Dakota Leadership Contact Directory

Use this directory to send the template above and ensure this message lands directly on the desks of those responsible for public infrastructure and safety:

  • North Dakota Department of Transportation (NDDOT)
  • Email: dot@nd.gov
  • Amtrak Customer Advocacy & Corporate Communications
  • Contact Page: amtrak.com/contact-us
  • Grand Forks City Council & Leadership
  • Mayor’s Office: mayor@grandforksgov.com
  • North Dakota Legislative Representatives (District 42 / Grand Forks Region)
  • Search tool for direct emails: ndlegis.gov/assembly

📱 Amplify the Message (Social Media Push)

Copy and paste this text to sound the alarm across your social channels:

🚨 A Williston teacher followed the rules, arrived an hour early in Fargo, was denied a ticket by staff “doing luggage,” and was later KICKED OFF the train in Grand Forks while on hold trying to pay. Left stranded for 24 HOURS outside a locked station during a severe thunderstorm and heat advisory. This isn’t an error—it’s institutional negligence. We demand accountability from NDDOT and Amtrak. 🛑 Read the full report and take action here: [Link to Blog Post]

🏷️ Campaign Hashtags

CourtroomWatchdog #GrandForksScandal #AmtrakNegligence #FargoAmtrak Fail #PublicSafetyFailure #NorthDakota #DemandAccountability #TransitSafety #CorporateNeglect #ProtectTheVulnerable #GrandForksND #WillistonND #PublicInfrastructure #InTheNews