Overseas “ghost” carriers and foreign-based dispatchers exploit a regulatory loophole in U.S. Electronic Logging Device (ELD) rules to falsify driver logs and overwork truckers beyond safe limits
The Loophole
Federal law mandates that ELDs track Hours-of-Service (HOS) to prevent fatigue-related crashes, but it does not explicitly prohibit foreign-based personnel from editing or annotating these records The Free Press – Tampa+1. This means a dispatcher in Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia, or elsewhere can log into a carrier’s ELD system, alter a driver’s hours, and face no federal sanction
How It’s Done
Reports and videos show that overseas dispatchers:
- Log into the ELD system remotely from outside North America.
- Edit or add “ghost” co-drivers to the driver’s log, effectively extending available drive time
- Manipulate duty status to avoid mandatory rest periods, such as the 34-hour off-duty reset required by FMCSA
- Add false annotations to make it appear the driver is compliant, even if they are working beyond legal limits
These changes can be made without the driver’s direct intervention, as long as the carrier or dispatcher is authorized to edit the logs under current rules.
Why It’s Dangerous
- Overworking drivers beyond safe HOS limits increases fatigue-related crash risks.
- False logs can mask unsafe driving conditions, endangering other road users.
- Accountability gap: If a U.S.-based driver or dispatcher tampers with logs, they face legal consequences; foreign actors often avoid enforcement
Legislative Response
The GHOSTRUCK Act (Guarding Hours-of-Service Oversight and Stopping Tampering by Remote Unofficial Carrier Keeper Act) proposes to close this loophole by:
- Restricting edits/annotations to ELD records to only those made by a carrier, dispatcher, or driver physically located in North America.
- Preserving driver approval for all changes, ensuring final oversight remains with the driver .
If passed, the bill would make it illegal for overseas personnel to manipulate U.S. ELD logs, aiming to restore accountability and improve highway safety.
In short: Overseas “ghost” carriers exploit the lack of a geographic restriction in ELD rules to remotely alter driver logs, overwork drivers, and avoid U.S. enforcement — a gap lawmakers are now targeting with the GHOSTRUCK Act.
