Boston Herald

PROBE OF ENGINEER STALLED

NTSB awaiting injured driver in N.J. train crash

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HOBOKEN, N.J. — National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­ors held off questionin­g the engineer in the deadly Hoboken train crash because of his injuries and struggled to lift clues from the train’s black box recorders.

Authoritie­s want to know why the NJ Transit commuter train with engineer Thomas Gallagher at the controls smashed through a steel and concrete bumper and hurtled into the station’s waiting area Thursday morning. A woman on the platform was killed, and more than 100 others were injured.

NTSB vice chairwoman T. Bella Dinh-Zarr said yesterday the board, the lead agency in the investigat­ion, has been “in touch” with Gallagher, but “unfortunat­ely, as you may know, he was injured, so we’re scheduling the interview with him.”

She said blood and urine were taken from him and sent for testing, standard procedure in train accidents.

However, a government official said that investigat­ors from one of the other agencies taking part in the probe interviewe­d Gallagher three times yesterday.

Meanwhile, the NTSB retrieved the event recorder that was in the locomotive at the rear of the train but hasn’t been able to download its data and has gone to the manufactur­er for help, Dinh-Zarr said. The event recorder contains speed and braking informatio­n.

The NTSB also hasn’t been able to extract a recorder from the forward-facing video camera in the train’s mangled first car, DinhZarr said. She said the wreckage cannot be safely entered yet because it is under a collapsed section of the station’s roof.

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