The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Savannah man among 2 killed in Amtrak crash

Over 100 hurt when train hit parked freight train in South Carolina.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

Two Amtrak employees were killed — including a Savannah man — and more than 100 passengers were injured when their train slammed into a parked CSX freight train near Columbia, S.C., early Sunday morning.

It’s unknown how many other Georgians were among the injured. Train 91 was traveling from New York’s Penn Station to Miami with eight crew members and 139 passengers when it crashed.

This is Amtrak’s third deadly wreck in less than two months.

Investigat­ors are looking into why a switch was aligned to divert the southbound Amtrak train onto a siding where the CSX freight train was parked, said National Transporta­tion Security Board Chairman Robert Sumwalt. CSX owns and controls the tracks at the site of the wreck, he said. “Of course, key to this investigat­ion is learning why that switch was aligned that way,” Sumwalt said. “There is catastroph­ic damage to each of the locomotive­s. In fact, I would say that the Amtrak locomotive would be not recognizab­le at all.”

The NTSB, Sumwalt added, will interview the CSX freight train crew and its dispatcher­s. CSX officials did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment

Sunday afternoon.

Michael Kempf, 54, of Savannah, the train engi- neer, and Michael Cella, 36, of Orange Park, Fla., the conductor, were killed in the crash. Both were in the lead Amtrak engine, which derailed at 2:35 a.m. in Cayce, S.C., outside Colum- bia and about 70 miles northeast of Augusta.

No o ne answered t he phone at Kempf’s home Sunday and his relatives did not respond to requests for comment. Kempf’s Face- book profile say he previously worked for the U.S. Army. His Facebook timeline, which was still public Sunday evening, features numer- ous patriotic postings supporting the American flag, U.S. troops and the Pledge of Allegiance. Kempf wished his wife a happy birthday on June 2, calling her “mi amor” and thanking her for “being the person you are and always supporting me in my crazy life.”

“Without you, things just wouldn’t be the same,” he wrote. “We have had an amazing journey and it’s not over yet.”

Lexington County, S.C., Coroner Margaret Fisher said she spoke with his family Sunday.

“As you can imagine, they are very, very distraught,” Fisher told reporters in an emotional news conference. “We are working with them to make sure they are taken care of. Being out of state and having a deceased loved one in another state is very difficult.”

Fisher added she was grateful there were no other fatalities, given that there were more than 100 peo- ple on the Amtrak passenger train.

“Any time you have anything that happens like that, you would expect more fatalities, but God blessed us and we only had the two,” she said. “We wish that we didn’t have any fatalities.”

Two other passengers were Columbia for food and shelin critical condition Sunday, ter. A local restaurant fed Fisher said. Twenty-seven them eggs, grits and sauothers who suffered minor sages. About 30 volunteers injuries were brought to Lexassiste­d with the effort. ington Medical Center. All “They seem to be in fairly but two were discharged by good spirits,” said Cuthbert 11 a.m. Sunday, said hospi- Langley, a Red Cross spokestal spokeswoma­n Jennifer man for the South Carolina Wilson. region. “They are, of course,

Dozens of other passen- on their cellphones comgers streamed into Pine municating with their loved Ridge Middle School in West ones. But they seem to be doing OK, given the circumstan­ces.”

Passenger Derek Pettaway told CBS News he was sleeping when the train began “shaking violently” before coming to a sudden halt.

“You knew we’d hit some- thing or we’d derailed,” Pettaway said.

The force of the crash dislodged a seat and knocked it onto passenger Tronia Dorsey’s legs, her son, Andre Neblett, told The Associated Press. The 43-year-old woman described a terrifying scene inside the dark compartmen­t, with people screaming and babies wailing, the AP reported.

“It was chaos,” Andre Neb- lett said after driving from North Carolina to retrieve his mother’s suitcase from a Red Cross shelter. “She said she was just waiting on somebody to get to her.”

Elliot Smith of West Colum- bia told The State newspaper he was at a friend’s house nearby when they heard the crash. To him, it sounded like a propane tank exploding.

“The sound was so loud, you instantly knew it was bad,” he said.

On Wednesday, an Amtrak train carrying congressio­nal Republican­s to a party retreat collided with a garbage truck at a crossing in rural Virginia, killing one of the truck’s passengers. Six others were injured.

And on Dec. 18, an Amtrak train jumped its tracks on an overpass south of Tacoma, Wash. Three people were killed and dozens were hurt. The train was traveling at more than twice the speed limit when it derailed.

Amtrak President Richard Anderson said his organizati­on is cooperatin­g with the NTSB investigat­ion of Sunday’s crash.

“We are doing everything in our power to operate a safe and reliable railroad,” Anderson, the former head of Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines, told reporters in a conference call Sunday. “We always prioritize safety as the very first priority at Amtrak and will continue to do so.”

 ?? TIM DOMINICK / THE STATE ?? Authoritie­s investigat­e the scene of a fatal Amtrak train crash in Cayce, South Carolina, on Sunday. At least two were killed and dozens injured.
TIM DOMINICK / THE STATE Authoritie­s investigat­e the scene of a fatal Amtrak train crash in Cayce, South Carolina, on Sunday. At least two were killed and dozens injured.

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