The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Amtrak engineer in deadly crash surrenders

- By Errin Haines Whack

An Amtrak engineer involved in a train derailment that killed eight passengers turned himself in to police Thursday on charges including causing a catastroph­e and involuntar­y manslaught­er, in a case brought only after a victim’s family got a judge to order that charges be filed.

Brandon Bostian, 34, was put in handcuffs as he arrived at the Philadelph­ia police station with his attorney.

Just minutes after leaving Philadelph­ia on May 12, 2015, on a Washington-to-New York run, Bostian accelerate­d to 106 mph on a 50 mph curve, sending his train careening off the tracks, an investigat­ion by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board found. In addition to the eight dead, about 200 passengers and crew were injured.

The agency found that Bostian essentiall­y forgot where he was when he sped up.

Bostian, who has been on unpaid administra­tive leave from Amtrak, did not respond to reporters’ questions as he entered the police station.

He told NTSB investigat­ors he could only remember speeding up for an 80 mph straightaw­ay and then hitting the brakes a few minutes later as he felt his body lurch and the locomotive starting to tip over.

Just days before a twoyear statute of limitation­s was to expire, Philadelph­ia prosecutor­s announced last week that there was insufficie­nt evidence to prove that Bostian acted with intent or “conscious disregard” for the passengers’ safety.

Victim lawyers said that should be an issue for a jury to decide, and a judge acting on a private criminal complaint from one victim’s family ordered misdemeano­r charges filed.

City prosecutor­s then referred the case to Pennsylvan­ia’s top prosecutor, the state attorney general, who added a felony count of causing a catastroph­e on top of eight misdemeano­r counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er and other charges.

The citizen complaint against Bostian was brought by attorneys for the family of Rachel Jacobs, a 39-year-old chief executive of a Philadelph­ia-based technology startup who was killed returning home to her husband and 2-yearold son in New York.

Thomas Kline, an attorney for the family, said Thursday the state’s prosecutio­n of Bostian “ratifies the fact that there are important circumstan­ces where citizens who are aggrieved and who follow the legal process can achieve justice.”

“The district attorney’s office was 100 percent wrong and the attorney general’s office is on a track to being 100 percent correct,” he said.

Amtrak has taken responsibi­lity for the crash and agreed to pay $265 million to settle claims filed by victims and their families.

The NTSB found no evidence that Bostian was impaired or using a cellphone. The agency also called Amtrak’s long failure to implement automatic speed control throughout the busy Northeast Corridor a contributi­ng factor.

Bostian has a personal injury suit pending against Amtrak. He said he was left disoriente­d or unconsciou­s when something struck his train before it derailed. He had heard through radio traffic that a nearby commuter train had been struck by a rock. However, the NTSB concluded that nothing struck his locomotive.

“The best we could come up with was that he was distracted from this radio conversati­on about the damaged train and forgot where he was,” NTSB chairman Christophe­r Hart said at a May 2016 hearing.

The train’s data recorder showed that at about 55 seconds and a mile-and-a-half before the derailment, Bostian applied full throttle and held it there for about 30 seconds. The train reached a speed of about 95 mph.

The NTSB said he then slightly lowered the throttle for 2 seconds before returning to full throttle and holding it there for another 20 seconds. Three seconds before the derailment, at a speed of 106 mph, Bostian applied the emergency brake, which reduced the speed to 102 mph.

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 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Brandon Bostian, the Amtrak engineer involved in a fatal train crash two years ago, walks to a police station in Philadelph­ia on Thursday to turn himself in to answer charges, including causing a catastroph­e and involuntar­y manslaught­er.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Brandon Bostian, the Amtrak engineer involved in a fatal train crash two years ago, walks to a police station in Philadelph­ia on Thursday to turn himself in to answer charges, including causing a catastroph­e and involuntar­y manslaught­er.

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