The USPS Taxpayer Funded Ghost Fleet of Middletown Ohio
A truck plate from a Metz Towing's Instagram sent us down another OH trucking rabbit hole. We found a Hazmat carrier that led to another entire Ghost fleet.
It started the way most of these stories do…with a truck trying to do something stupid on a two-lane road. Then, another joined in. What are the odds?
A tractor-trailer tries to thread a pass it has no business attempting and clips another rig that took the curb too tight. Now you’ve got two trucks tangled up and going nowhere. The wrecker, Metz Towing, rolls out, hooks up, and drags the mess off the shoulder. I grab the plate number, because that’s what you do, but a plate is a thread. If you pull on a thread long enough, the whole sweater can come apart in your hands.
I ran that plate through the VIN-and-plate tool on THE TEA, the platform we built to do exactly this. The plate pulled a VIN. The VIN pulled an inspection history and a crash history. The inspection history pulled a name: SSL Trucking Inc, USDOT 3927167, out of Middletown, Ohio. A hazmat carrier. A million dollars of insurance on file. A Gmail address, ssltruckinginc@gmail.com, is listed as the contact for a company. To me, insurance is a little light for Hazmat, but that’s not my rabbit hole for the day.
This was so stupid. I chose the rabbit-hole route of the routine fender-bender on a back road, which turned into something a lot more interesting. Because the front page of SSL Trucking’s report looks survivable. It’s when you read what the number is made of that the floor gives out.
The phone-number-and-shared-officer breadcrumbs that catch a lazy chameleon, they’re not here. What’s maxed out are operational red flags, and what’s screaming is crash risk. This isn’t a sloppy reincarnation leaving fingerprints on the doorknob. This looks correct on file, but is catastrophic on asphalt. Which is harder? Which is the point?
The capacity lie
Pull SSL’s census numbers, and they claim 1,000 power units, 1,000 drivers, 850 CDL holders, hauling hazmat, having run 116.4 million miles, but changes to their record aren’t entirely new.
We do the arithmetic against the VINs and plates that actually show up at the scales and flag it as mileage inflation, roughly 4.6 million miles per truck. There is no truck on God’s green earth that runs 4.6 million miles in this window. The platform’s “capacity honesty” panel strips the claim down to about 25 real trucks, and then notes that those 25 trucks have been inspected under 505 unique VINs and 535 unique license plates. Five hundred VINs. Five hundred thirty-five plates. For twenty-five trucks.
Go quarter by quarter through the out-of-service history and watch this thing wake up:
2024 Q2 , 8 violations, 12.5% OOS
2024 Q3 , 10 violations, 0% OOS
2024 Q4 , 13 violations, 7.7% OOS
2025 Q1 , 34 violations, 8.8% OOS
2025 Q2 , 66 violations, 19.7% OOS
2025 Q3 , 30 violations, 13.3% OOS
2025 Q4 , 53 violations, 32.1% OOS
2026 Q1 , 29 violations, 10.3% OOS
An escalating trend over 27 months, deteriorating compliance, not isolated incidents. But look more closely at the raw violation volume: 8, 10, 13, then 34, then 66. The road exposure didn’t drift upward. It exploded in the first half of 2025. This is a carrier that scaled, more trucks, more plates, more warm bodies through the turnstile, and the out-of-service rate climbed right alongside it until, by the end of 2025, one in three roadside inspections was ending with a truck or a driver yanked off the road. You don’t accidentally quadruple your violation count in two quarters. You do that on purpose, by putting more iron and more drivers on the interstate than you can possibly control.
The triangulation
For about forty years, FMCSA was a filing cabinet. A magnificent, federally-funded filing cabinet that stored data beautifully and connected it to itself almost not at all. It could tell you SSL’s address. It could tell you SSL’s crashes. What it could not do, on its own, was tell you that the truck SSL ran through a scale in Utah on Tuesday was the same truck that had run through a scale in Ohio on Friday under a different plate, with a different carrier name, and with a driver from a different state. That gap is where the bad actors live.
You close it with triangulation, three tools orbiting one another. The field report tool takes a ZIP code (here, 45044, Middletown) and lights up everyone in that footprint who crosses over on an identifier. The VIN-and-plate tool takes the steel and asks who else has run it. The officer-network tool takes a human being and asks what else their name has touched. Run all three, and they stop being lists; they become a gravitational map of who pulls on whom.
On the easy identifiers, SSL Trucking is clean. Network panel reads VIN connections, 590. Phone sharing, 0. Address sharing, 0. Officer connections, 0. Watchlist matches, 0. The canonical merge ties SSL to 56 related carriers, 0 through officers, 0 through phones, 0 through addresses. Forty-two through VINs. Sixteen through plates. If all you had was the old filing-cabinet method, match the phone, match the officer, SSL would slide straight through. It would read like a messy little hazmat hauler and nothing more.
That’s craft. Somebody got good at not leaving the obvious fingerprints. Which is exactly why the equipment matters. You can scrub a phone number. You can rent a new address. You can swap an agent of record. But equipment doesn’t lie. Debt instruments don’t lie. Money doesn’t lie. A truck is a physical object with a seventeen-character VIN burned into the frame, and you cannot make it forget where it’s been.
What you cannot throw away is the single carrier SSL shares 89 VINs with, a second Ohio carrier, about fifteen minutes up the road in Fairfield, that we flag as SSL’s top VIN partner. In the fleet cross-reference, the shared-equipment ledger between the two of them runs to 120 unit records. That’s not a lease crossover. Two nominally separate, unrelated motor carriers do not run eighty-nine of the same trucks back and forth across the country by accident. One truck, sure. Eighty-nine is a fleet wearing two names. And the federal transfer records show the steel moving between them in real time. Yet the two carriers share, say it with me, zero officers, zero phones, zero addresses in the federal data. The eighty-nine trucks are the entire bridge. Pull them out, on paper, these two companies have never met.
Equipment doesn’t lie.
Now the humans, cross-referenced against Ohio’s corporate and UCC records, surfaced through OpenCorporates. All of it is public. All of it sitting right there.
SSL Trucking Inc was incorporated in Ohio on July 30, 2022. The man who started it, the incorporator of record, is Sardor Tulkinov. But the Ohio corporate and UCC filings show the entity didn’t stay with him. Over time, it flowed to Fotima Yunusbaeva, who serves as the registered agent on the filing associated with that 2208 Oxford State Road address in Middletown. Tulkinov stood it up; control moved to Yunusbaeva.
At the federal level, there is no named company official for SSL Trucking. FMCSA lists nobody. No officer. The handoff from Tulkinov to Yunusbaeva, the single most basic fact about who runs this hazmat carrier, does not exist anywhere in the federal system. It exists in only two places: in the Ohio corporate and UCC filings and in THE TEA’s own change-detection, which independently flags “1 officer change in the last 24 months.” The platform caught the handoff that the federal database never recorded, and the state corporate record tells you who was on each side of it.
The question “who controls this truck company” for a carrier hauling hazardous materials with a 97 ISS score returns a blank. You only recover the answer by triangulating state incorporation records against a private platform’s officer-change flag. That’s the entire argument for why this kind of intelligence has to exist.
Look at the crash counts
In the last 24 months, SSL Trucking has been in more than thirty reportable crashes. And in the carrier’s own federal safety record, every single one of them is a tow-away. Not a fender tap. Every crash on the books was violent enough that a truck had to be dragged off the road on a hook, the same way that the two-lane pass that started this whole thing ended with Metz Towing on the shoulder. Thirty-plus tow-aways. Fourteen injuries. Zero fatalities.
So far. Zero is doing a tremendous amount of work in that sentence, and I refuse to let it sit comfortably, because when you look at how this carrier operates, zero deaths isn’t a safety record. It’s a coin that keeps landing on its edge.
Eighteen false records of duty status. Eighteen times, a driver was caught lying about how long he’d been awake behind the wheel. Not paperwork. A tired driver covering his tracks.
Nine serious license violations, drivers operating a commercial vehicle with no valid CDL, with a suspended CDL, or in violation of a restriction.
One driver flagged in the federal Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse as prohibited from safety-sensitive functions, behind the wheel anyway.
Two instances of drugs in the driver’s possession while operating.
Brakes out of service. Tires worn past the cords, leaking, flat. Steering-axle brakes metal-to-metal. ABS lamps dead.
The human cost of “850 drivers across 25 trucks.” Warm bodies through a turnstile faster than anyone can vet them, some unlicensed, some chemically prohibited, some falsifying the very logs meant to keep them from killing a family at two in the morning. The investigation-probability model reads 95%, and lists the five automatic triggers at their exact levels: Unsafe Driving BASIC at 99%, Hours-of-Service at 100%, Controlled Substances at 100%, Vehicle Maintenance at 84%, and , as a hazmat carrier , Hazardous Materials Compliance at 79%. It finds that the carrier meets the criteria for a mandatory post-crash investigation under 49 CFR 385.321(c). Its crash-prediction model reads 79.9, HIGH. Its settlement-exposure model, run against 4,410 historical enforcement cases, puts the carrier’s estimated exposure at roughly $527,000.
Everybody on the road with this outfit is a moving target. When you share a lane with a carrier running unlicensed, clearinghouse-prohibited, falsified-log drivers on metal-to-metal brakes and bald tires, the question was never if. The question is when, whose family, and which mile marker.
It’s hauling hazmat
SSL Trucking is a hazardous materials carrier. And the same federal file that shows the bald tires and the false logs shows 22 hazmat-compliance violations, including one citation for hazardous material leaking in or from a package, and one for operating hazmat without the required federal HM safety permit at all.
A carrier wearing a costume, running clearinghouse-prohibited and unlicensed drivers, with a one-in-three out-of-service rate by the end of 2025, and brakes failing at the scale, was hauling regulated hazardous materials. At least once, with a leak from the package. At least once, without the permit the federal government requires to do it at all.
That two-lane pass that kicked this off ended with sheet metal and a wrecker. The next one might not. When the carrier in the curve is placarded, “tow-away” stops being the worst word in the sentence. That’s the “when, not if.” This isn’t a compliance story. It’s a body-count story that hasn’t happened yet.
The insurance cycling
Insurance Cycling: 0 of 25, driven by three distinct insurers in recent history and five policy cancellations in the last 24 months. When you pull the authority action timeline on the carrier’s docket, it’s not clean either: it reads as a string of involuntary revocations followed by re-grants, the unmistakable rhythm of a carrier whose insurance keeps lapsing and getting reinstated. (Worth noting a quirk: the summary panel says “no revocation history” while the docket timeline shows the involuntary revocations, exactly the kind of internal FMCSA inconsistency that makes a single federal screen unreliable on its own, and triangulation necessary.)
Insurance doesn’t cycle like that on a healthy operation.
USPS is their biggest shipper
You’re paying for this. The front page never shows you who is paying for all this. Pull the bill-of-lading parties off SSL’s inspections, and the number one customer is the United States Postal Service. USPS lands on 57 of these inspections, more than three times the next name on the board. Add the other spellings an inspector scratches into the field by hand, US MAIL, US POSTAL SERVICE, US POSTAL, US POST OFFICE, and it stops being a contest. Federal mail is this carrier’s bread and butter.
What lies beneath the postal loads is a wall of names anyone would know. Boeing. Coca-Cola. Kroger. Tyson. Sherwin-Williams. Anheuser-Busch. Sherwin-Williams and its broker arm are currently in litigation over bad shipper selection. As is Anheuser-Busch.
A name on a roadside BOL is not a signed contract. Some of these moved through a broker, some are the consignee on the receiving dock, and the field is self-reported and messy. Fine. The volume is still real, and every one of these parties had the same public file I did. Same crash count, same out-of-service rate, same clearinghouse hit, same hazmat violations. None of it is behind a paywall. A shipper or broker who puts a load on SSL is not buying a truck. They are buying SSL’s record and stapling their own name to it for the day the inevitable arrives. One side of the government cuts the check. The other side should be pulling the authority. That gap is the entire reason vetting has to go past “are they compliant” and into what the carrier actually is.
Why this is the new normal
For decades, an operation like this was effectively invisible. The data to catch it existed, sitting in that federal filing cabinet the whole time, but nobody could connect it to itself fast enough to matter. By the time you assembled the picture, the entity had shed its skin and crawled off under a new authority. That era is over.
The VIN-crossover, the network graph, the officer-change detection, the capacity-honesty math I just walked you through, that’s not exotic anymore. The private sector built it. We built it. GenLogs and Bluewire built versions of it. FMCSA itself is now buying these private-sector tools to run its investigations. The filing cabinet was hired by the locksmith. The agency that spent forty years storing the evidence is now using commercial intelligence to act on it.
It didn’t stop at the agency. Post-Montgomery, the litigators and the insurers are running the same tools. Law enforcement outside FMCSA is running them. Legislators and policymakers are running them. Journalists, I am running them. The pressure now comes from every direction at once. A broker who tenders a load to a carrier like SSL isn’t risking a late delivery anymore; they’re adopting that carrier’s risk into their own supply chain, and the same data that built this story will build the complaint when the inevitable happens.
That’s the whole point of vetting that goes deeper than “are they compliant.” Compliant is a snapshot, and a carrier can score 15/15 on the compliant part of the page while scoring 0/15 on whether its trucks can stop. What you actually need to know is how a carrier exhibits risk: the deflated truck counts, the inflated mileage, the equipment orbiting a second authority, the ownership handoff that’s invisible at the federal level, the drivers cycling through a turnstile, the insurance cycling underneath, the placards riding on failing brakes. You need to know what risk you’re about to marry before you say I do.
A plate number on a wrecker job feels like nothing. Pull the thread anyway.


Take it to Shawn Duffy