Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Commuter train derails outside New York City

- By KAREN MATTHEWS and RACHELLE BLIDNER

NEW HYDE PARK, N.Y. — Dozens of people were injured Saturday when a commuter train hit a work train east of New York City and derailed, officials said.

The eastbound Long Island Rail Road train derailed east of New Hyde Park just after 9 p.m., a spokesman for the railroad said.

A spokesman for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said 11 passengers were taken to hospitals, all with injuries that did not appear to be life-threatenin­g. Official estimates on the number of injured people ranged from 29 to 40.

Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano said there were a “wide range of injuries from broken bones to laceration­s to cuts.”

About 600 people were on the 8:22 p.m. train out of Penn Station train when it crashed, the Democratic governor said in a statement.

Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority Chairman Thomas Prendergas­t said a front car sideswiped the westbound work train, causing the second and third cars of the passenger train to derail.

Passenger Ray Martel, 41, of West Hempstead, was heading home after spending the evening in New York City visiting friends.

Martel, who was in the first car, said when the train hit something “everyone gasped.”

“We knew we hit something but we didn’t know how bad it was,” he said.

Passenger Craig Heller of East Meadow told Newsday he was in the second car, which “all of a sudden just started shaking.”

“A chair in the car I was in went flying and the door crashed open,” Heller said. “Fortunatel­y, then it stopped and we were tilted in our car, but everybody in our car was fine. It felt like we could actually completely tip over, obviously, while it was happening. That was a fear.”

Train service in the area was suspended in both directions indefinite­ly.

The Federal Railroad Administra­tion said it had investigat­ors en route to the scene.

The derailment happened just over a week after a commuter train crashed into the terminal in Hoboken, New Jersey, killing one person and injuring more than 100. Federal investigat­ors are still trying to determine the cause.

Long Island Rail Road trains have been involved in 72 accidents since Jan. 1, 2011, according to federal data, including three collisions and 15 derailment­s on tracks used for passenger service.

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