But preliminary data released after the first full day of the
National Transportation Safety Board's investigation did not clear
up the central mystery of the fatal accident: why did a Mercedes
sports utility vehicle end up on the wrong side of the crossing
barrier as the Metro-North train approached?
The fiery crash that followed killed the SUV driver and five train
passengers in the deadliest rail accident in the New York area in
more than three decades. It was the latest in a string of accidents
to unnerve commuters on the country's second-largest commuter
railroad.
The driver of the vehicle behind the Mercedes told NTSB
investigators on Thursday that traffic was "edging along" at the
railway crossing in Valhalla, an affluent town north of New York
City, Robert Sumwalt, an NTSB member, said at a news conference.
The Mercedes came to a stop on the crossing, Sumwalt said. The
barrier descended on its rear window. The crossing warning lights
began flashing and sirens started to ring out, and the driver behind
her described reversing to make room for her to retreat, gesturing
with his hands, Sumwalt said.
Instead, he watched as Ellen Brody, a 49-year-old mother of three
who worked in a local jewelry shop, got out of the Mercedes and
inspected the barrier without moving it before getting back into the
driver's seat.
"Then she sat in the vehicle," Sumwalt said. "He described it as if
she had enough time to put on her seatbelt."
Investigators also interviewed the engineer on Thursday who was
driving the crowded rush-hour train. He told them that he spotted
the Mercedes ahead of him, Sumwalt said.
Data from a train recording device showed it was traveling at 58
miles per hour, just below the speed limit of 60 miles per hour, and
had sounded its horn in the usual way as it approached the crossing:
two long blasts, a short one, two more long ones.
The engineer deployed the train's emergency brake, and the train's
horn blew again for four seconds. Meanwhile, the driver behind the
Mercedes watched as Brody "suddenly pulled forward," Sumwalt said.
"As she did so, the train struck the car," Sumwalt said.
[to top of second column] |
The train, pushing the Mercedes down the track, took nearly 30
seconds and 950 feet before coming to a stop after the emergency
brake was activated, Sumwalt.
Long pieces of electrified "third" rail skewered the Mercedes and
pierced the first two train carriages as a gasoline-fueled fire
erupted. Passengers riding the train's rear remained oblivious to
the carnage unfolding ahead of them.
Sumwalt said his team were seeking Brody's records and trying to
figure out how familiar she was with the route and her Mercedes.
On Thursday, people commuting to work on Metro-North said the crash
made them think more about safety.
"Did I think deep down whether I should be sitting in the first car?
I thought about it," said Alan Trager, 65, chief executive officer
of a non-profit agency, as he rode the same train line out of Grand
Central Terminal.
"I go, 'Oh, I should have paid attention to the emergency windows,'"
he said as he sat in the second carriage of the train. "It's
enhanced my consciousness of that."
About 250 people a year are killed in vehicle-train collisions at
U.S. crossings, according to the Federal Railroad Administration.
Graphic: http://link.reuters.com/syh93w
(Writing by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Barbara Goldberg, David
Gregorio and Bernard Orr)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|