Los Angeles Times

Violations preceded train crash

An audit reportedly found issues with New Jersey Transit before last week’s fatal accident at a station.

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HOBOKEN, N.J. — Federal rail officials found dozens of violations during an audit focusing on New Jersey Transit’s safety and operations, months before a commuter train crashed, killing a woman and injuring more than 100 others, a U.S. official told the Associated Press on Saturday.

The official, who was familiar with an audit by the Federal Railroad Administra­tion, spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the official wasn’t authorized to speak publicly about an ongoing investigat­ion.

The railroad administra­tion began an audit in June after noticing an uptick in rail incidents and found “dozens of safety violations” that needed to be fixed immediatel­y, the official said.

The commuter rail agency was fined as a result of the audit, the official said, adding that federal agencies are continuing to work with the railroad to ensure compliance with federal rail safety guidelines.

New Jersey Transit trains have been involved in more than 150 accidents that caused more than $4.8 million in damage to tracks or equipment since Jan. 1, 2011, according to federal data.

There were 25 such accidents in 2015 and 10 in the first seven months of 2016, but none caused injuries or death. Most of the incidents occurred at low speeds and more than half were in train yards.

On Thursday, a New Jersey Transit commuter train smashed through a steel-and-concrete bumper and hurtled into the station’s waiting area, killing a woman on the platform and injuring more than 100 other people.

The train’s engineer, Thomas Gallagher, who was among those injured in the crash, has been interviewe­d by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, officials said, but the agency provided no further details about the interview in a news release Saturday.

The NTSB also retrieved an event recorder from the locomotive at the rear of the train, and investigat­ors are waiting to download speed and braking informatio­n from it. Investigat­ors haven’t been able to extract a second recorder from the forward-facing video camera in the train’s mangled first car because it is under a collapsed section of the train station’s roof.

The signals on the tracks leading to Hoboken Terminal appear to be working normally and officials completed a walking inspection of the track, finding nothing that would have affected the performanc­e of the train, the NTSB said in an update Saturday. Investigat­ors have obtained video from other trains that were inside the train station when the crash occurred.

Signs posted at a New Jersey Transit maintenanc­e facility in Hoboken, dated February, said there had been 10 incidents involving trains in the prior two months, including five derailment­s. The sign said the “serious incidents reflect a dangerous trend” and that the main cause of the incidents appeared to be caused by human error.

A spokesman for New Jersey Transit didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

 ?? Kevin P. Coughlin Office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo ?? NEW YORK Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other officials, including New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, visit the site of Thursday’s crash. The commuter train smashed through a bumper and into a waiting area, killing one.
Kevin P. Coughlin Office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo NEW YORK Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other officials, including New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, visit the site of Thursday’s crash. The commuter train smashed through a bumper and into a waiting area, killing one.

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