Gulf News

Man who left truck on tracks arrested

Lives were likely saved by passenger cars designed to absorb a crash

-

Acommuter train bound for Los Angeles derailed before dawn on Tuesday in a fiery collision with an abandoned commercial pickup after the truck’s driver took a wrong turn and got stuck on the tracks.

There was a loud boom and the screech of brakes before three of the train’s five cars toppled over, sending 30 people to hospitals. Four were in critical condition, including the engineer.

“It seemed like an eternity while we were flying around the train. Everything was flying,” said passenger Joel Bingham. “A brush of death definitely came over me.”

The train pushed the truck some 90 metres down the tracks, said Robert Sumwalt of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

Lives were likely saved by passenger cars designed to absorb a crash. They were purchased after a deadly collision a decade ago, Metrolink officials said. The four passenger cars remained largely intact, as did the locomotive.

Police found the disoriente­d driver of the demolished Ford F-450 pickup 2.6 kilometres from the crossing 45 minutes after the crash, said Jason Benites, an assistant chief of the Oxnard Police Department.

That driver, Jose Alejandro Sanchez-Ramirez, 54, of Yuma, Arizona, was briefly hospitalis­ed then arrested on Tuesday afternoon on suspicion of felony hitand-run, Benites said.

Sanchez-Ramirez, who delivers produce, was driving a pickup with an empty bed pulling a trailer with some welding equipment in it. He told police he tried to turn right at an intersecti­on but turned prematurel­y and his truck got stuck straddling the rails.

Police said they tested Sanchez-Ramirez for drugs and alcohol, but they would not discuss the results.

The train had just left its second stop of Oxnard on its way to downtown Los Angeles, about 105 kilometres away, when it struck the truck around 5.45am. There were 48 passengers aboard and three crew members who were all injured.

The engineer saw the abandoned vehicle and hit the brakes but there wasn’t enough time to stop, Oxnard Fire Battalion Chief Sergio Martinez said.

Twenty-eight people were taken to hospitals by ambulance and two more went to the hospital on their own, but only eight had been admitted by day’s end.

Patients had spinal injuries and broken bones, officials said.

 ?? Reuters ?? Fiery collision Double-decker train cars lie scattered after a Los Angeles-bound commuter train slammed into a truck and trailer abandoned on the tracks in Oxnard, California.
Reuters Fiery collision Double-decker train cars lie scattered after a Los Angeles-bound commuter train slammed into a truck and trailer abandoned on the tracks in Oxnard, California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates