The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Investigat­ors want to question engineer in Hoboken crash

- By Michael Balsamo and Michael R. Sisak

HOBOKEN, N.J. » Federal investigat­ors trying to figure out the cause of the deadly rail crash at the Hoboken station hoped to question the engineer and lift clues Friday from the train’s black box recorders, though one of the devices was proving difficult to extract from the wreckage.

The recorders contain informatio­n on speed, braking and other conditions that could help investigat­ors determine why the NJ Transit commuter train smashed through a steel-and-concrete barrier and hurtled into the station waiting area Thursday morning. One person was killed and more than 100 others were injured.

National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­ors aimed to speak to engineer Thomas Gallagher, 48, on Friday. State officials said he was cooperatin­g.

Gallagher, a NJ Transit engineer for about 18 years, was pulled from the wreckage, treated at a hospital and released.

Investigat­ors were also examining the event recorder taken from the locomotive at the rear of the train, NTSB Vice Chairman T. Bella Dinh-Zarr said.

But it was proving difficult to extract a recorder from the forward-facing camera in the train’s mangled first car. Authoritie­s used heavy equipment to try to pull a collapsed section of the waiting area roof off the car and get to the recorder, whose footage should show what was ahead of the train before it crashed.

“The one thing we know for sure is that the train came into the station too fast. Why that is, we don’t know,” New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said.

“Was it error by the engineer? Did he have some type of medical emergency or circumstan­ce that rendered him unable to control the train? Was there some equipment failure that didn’t allow him to slow down?”

Some witnesses said they didn’t hear or feel the brakes being applied. Authoritie­s would not estimate how fast the train was going before it hit the bumper at the end of its track. But the speed limit into the station is 10 mph.

Bumpers are meant mainly to denote the end of a track, not to stop a fastmoving train, said David B. Clarke, who runs the Center for Transporta­tion Research at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Some bumpers are designed to absorb the impact if a slow-moving car gets loose, but the maximum speed one can handle can be as low as 5 mph in some cases, he said.

Trains are supposed to stop well clear of bumpers, Clarke said.

Falling debris from the crash killed 34-year-old Fabiola Bittar de Kroon, who had just dropped her toddler daughter off at day care before rushing to catch a train. Sixteen of the injured remained hospitaliz­ed, two in intensive care.

More than 100,000 people use NJ Transit to commute from New Jersey to New York City each day. The NJ Transit portion of the Hoboken station remained closed Friday, slowing the morning commute.

The wreck has raised questions of whether technology called positive train control would have made a difference if NJ Transit had installed it. The GPSbased system is designed to prevent accidents by automatica­lly slowing or stopping trains that are going too fast.

Railroads are under government orders to install positive train control by the end of 2018. The deadline has been repeatedly extended at the industry’s request.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This Thursday, Sept. 29, 2016 photo provided by a passenger who was on the train when it crashed shows wreckage at the Hoboken, N.J. rail station. The commuter train barreled into the station during the morning rush hour, coming to a halt in a covered...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This Thursday, Sept. 29, 2016 photo provided by a passenger who was on the train when it crashed shows wreckage at the Hoboken, N.J. rail station. The commuter train barreled into the station during the morning rush hour, coming to a halt in a covered...

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