The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

NTSB: Sleep apnea, speed cited in NYC-area train crashes

- By Michael R. Sisak and Joan Lowy

The engineers of two commuter trains that slammed into New York City-area stations in the last year were both suffering from severe sleep apnea and have no memory of the crashes, according to investigat­ive reports and interview transcript­s made public Thursday.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board said the common circumstan­ces of the Sept. 29, 2016, New Jersey Transit crash in Hoboken, New Jersey, and the Jan. 4, 2017, Long Island Rail Road crash in Brooklyn warranted combining findings and recommenda­tions in a single investigat­ive report to be released early next year.

Neither engineer had been diagnosed with sleep apnea before the crashes, according to the documents. People with the disorder are repeatedly awakened and robbed of rest as their airway closes and their breathing stops, leading to dangerous daytime drowsiness.

NJ Transit engineer Thomas Gallagher told investigat­ors he only remembered looking at his watch and the speedomete­r, blowing the horn and ringing the bell before his packed rush-hour train slammed into Hoboken Terminal at more than double the 10 mph speed limit.

A conductor standing on a platform told investigat­ors he couldn’t see the engineer through the cab window as the train rumbled into the station, indicating Gallagher may have slumped down or fallen.

Falling debris from the impact killed a woman standing on a platform. About 110 people aboard the train were hurt.

“The next thing I remember was a loud bang,” Gallagher recalled, according to a transcript of his Oct. 1, 2016, interview. “I was getting hit with dust and dirt. I was thrown about the cab. I hit my head, the back of my head, I presume on the wall behind me. And then I had a period where I was going in and out of consciousn­ess.”

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An injured passenger is taken from the Atlantic Terminal in the Brooklyn borough of New York after a Long Island Rail Road train hit a bumping block.
MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An injured passenger is taken from the Atlantic Terminal in the Brooklyn borough of New York after a Long Island Rail Road train hit a bumping block.

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