Showing posts with label driver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label driver. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2015

Behavior of SUV driver under scrutiny in deadly NY commuter train crash probe - 6 killed, 15 hurt when NY commuter train slams SUV - VIDEO: Six dead after train hits SUV

APTOPIX Train Car Col_Cham640360020515.jpg Feb. 4, 2015: Emergency personnel work to remove the wreckage of a deadly SUV and commuter train accident in Valhalla, N.Y. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow)

Federal investigators probing a deadly crash involving a New York commuter train and a SUV have focused on the behavior of the vehicle’s driver, who was identified Wednesday as a 49-year-old mother of three. 

Five men on the train, as well as the SUV’s driver, were killed late Tuesday in the deadliest accident in the 32-year history of the Metro-North commuter rail. The train smashed into the Mercedes ML350 driven by jewelry store employee Ellen Brody, which had become stuck on the tracks between the railroad crossing gates. 

“The big question everyone wants to know is: Why was this vehicle in the crossing?” said Robert Sumwalt, National Transportation Safety Board vice chairman.

The wreck happened after dark in backed-up traffic in an area where the tracks are straight but driving can be tricky. Motorists exiting or entering the adjacent Taconic State Parkway have to turn and cross the tracks near a wooded area and a cemetery.

Witnesses said Brody calmly got out of her vehicle after the crossing gates came down around her and hit her car. She then got back in and drove forward before the train hit the car, killing her instantly. 

“It looks like where she stopped she did not want to go on the tracks but the proximity of the gate to her car, you know, it was dark — maybe she didn’t know she was in front of the gate,” Rick Hope, who was in the car behind Brody, told WNYW.

“I said to myself, ‘The clock is ticking here, the gate is down, the bells are ringing — what are you going to do here?"” Hope added. “She looked a little confused, gets back in the car and pulls forward on the tracks.”

Traffic was moving slowly at the time, choked with drivers seeking to avoid the Taconic State Parkway because of an accident, Hope noted.

As of Wednesday evening, investigators had no evidence the crossing gates weren’t working properly, but their examination was just beginning, Sumwalt said.

Among other things, investigators also planned to examine the tracks, interview the crew and find out whether the SUV had a data recorder of its own.

Railroad grade crossings typically have gate arms designed to lift automatically if they hit a car or other object on the way down, railroad safety consultant Grady Cothen said. The wooden arms are designed to be easily broken if a car trapped between them moves forward or backward, he said.

Acknowledging that collisions between trains and cars rarely cause rider deaths, Sumwalt said the NTSB would also examine the adequacy of the train’s exits and the intensity of the fire, which investigators believe was sparked by the SUV’s gas tank.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said early indications are that the train was going 58 mph, or within the 60-to-70-mph speed limit in that area. The NTSB said it wanted to confirm speed and other data extracted from the recorder before releasing it.

It was not the first deadly crash at the site: A Metro-North train hit a truck, killing its driver, at the same Commerce Street crossing in 1984, according to Federal Railroad Administration records.

Rep. Patrick Maloney, D-N.Y., said Tuesday’s accident underscores the need for positive train control, a technology that uses WiFi and GPS to monitor trains’ exact position and automatically applies the brakes to prevent collisions or lessen their severity. While not specifically designed to address grade-crossing accidents, the technology can be expanded for such purposes, he said.

Congress passed a 2008 law that requires all railroads to install positive train control by the end of 2015, but it’s clear most of them will not meet the deadline.

The crash was so powerful that the electrified third rail came up and pierced the train and the SUV, and the SUV was pushed about 1,000 feet, Sumwalt said. The blaze consumed the SUV and the train’s first car.

Elizabeth Bordiga was commuting home from her New York City nursing job when she suddenly felt the train jerk a few times. She and other passengers in the middle part of the train started calmly walking to the back. But then they started smelling gasoline, and somebody said there was a fire.

But they couldn’t open the emergency window or figure out how to escape until a firefighter got a door open, she said. Commuters lifted each other down from the train to the ground about 7 feet below, said Bordiga, who uses a cane.

“When I was on the ground, I looked to the right and saw flames,” she said. “I couldn’t believe it.”

The train’s engineer tried to rescue people until the smoke and flames got so severe that he had to escape, Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino said

While officials did not immediately release any victims’ names, employers confirmed that the dead included Walter Liedtke, a curator of European paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Eric Vandercar, 53, a senior managing director at Mesirow Financial.

Every day, trains travel across more than 212,000 highway-grade rail crossings in the U.S. There are an average of 230 to 250 deaths a year at such crossings, down over 50 percent from two decades ago, FRA figures show.

Risky driver behavior or poor judgment accounts for 94 percent of grade crossing accidents, according to a 2004 government report.

Metro-North is the nation’s second-busiest commuter railroad, after the Long Island Rail Road, serving about 280,000 riders a day.

Late last year, the NTSB issued rulings on five Metro-North accidents in New York and Connecticut in 2013 and 2014, repeatedly finding fault with the railroad.

Among the accidents was a 2013 derailment in the Bronx that killed four people, the railroad’s first passenger fatalities, The NTSB said the engineer had fallen asleep at the controls because of a severe, undiagnosed case of sleep apnea.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click for more from MyFoxNY.com.

Click for more from the New York Post.


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Behavior of SUV driver under scrutiny in deadly NY commuter train crash probe - 6 killed, 15 hurt when NY commuter train slams SUV - VIDEO: Six dead after train hits SUV

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Uber vows larger focus on safety - Mass. Uber driver accused of rape

uber-safety-amid.jpg Dec. 8, 2014: Supporters of Aam Aadmi (Common Man) Party (AAP) hold placards during a protest after a woman was allegedly raped by a driver from ride-booking service Uber in New Delhi, India. (AP)

Uber promises to focus on rider safety amid increasing concerns that its drivers are not adequately screened for past criminal convictions.

In a blog post Wednesday, Uber’s head of global safety defended the company’s safety record but also wrote that “as we look to 2015, we will build new safety programs and intensify others.”

The taxi alternative, valued at $40 billion, lets passengers summon cars through an app in more than 250 cities around the world. It faces multiples legal and regulatory challenges as it expands in the United States and abroad.

Last week, prosecutors in California, where Uber is based, filed a lawsuit alleging that the company exaggerates how comprehensive its driver background checks are. They do not, for example, require that drivers be fingerprinted — unlike drivers of regulated taxis in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

The Wednesday blog post did not mention the California lawsuit, though it did reference a case in India in which a driver was accused of raping a passenger.

The blog post came the same day that an Uber driver in Massachusetts was arraigned on charges including rape and kidnapping after being accused of sexually assaulting a woman who had summoned the ride-sharing service.

In the post, the recently hired head of global safety at Uber offered few details of upcoming changes. The initiatives will include the creation of teams that can rapidly respond to safety-related reports and new ways to screen would-be drivers.

“We are finding solutions in many places that range from polygraph exams that fill gaps in available data to adding our own processes on top of existing screening for commercial licenses,” wrote company security chief Philip Cardenas. “We are exploring new ways to screen drivers globally, using scientific analysis and technology to find solutions.”

A spokesman for San Francisco County District Attorney George Gascon said due to its lawsuit, the office can’t comment on the specific proposals. “Obviously we encourage any changes that actually make rides safer,” said spokesman Alex Bastian.

Uber’s opponents in the taxi cab industry, who worry that the increasingly popular app is siphoning away their business, were not impressed.

Calling Uber’s proposals “a decoy to quell the intense criticism the company is generating worldwide,” a spokesman for the Taxicab, Limousine & Paratransit Association challenged the company to “follow the rule of law tomorrow and truly begin moving toward safe operations.”


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Uber vows larger focus on safety - Mass. Uber driver accused of rape

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Driver dies as passenger bus slams into gas tanker in Stony Hill

Saturday, October 04, 2014 | 9:33 AM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica — A Coaster bus driver died this morning and several passengers injured after the bus slammed into a gas tanker in Red Gal Ring, Stony Hill St Andrew.

The bus was heading into Kingston when it slammed into the tanker that was heading up the hill in the opposite direction.

Passengers reportedly said that the driver had been having problems getting the bus in gear while descending the steep hill, when the crash occurred.

No one in the tanker was hurt.

The driver of the bus was trapped in the wreckage and died on the scene. Some passengers reportedly received broken limbs and cuts and had to be rushed to the hospital.

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Driver dies as passenger bus slams into gas tanker in Stony Hill

Friday, October 3, 2014

Investigator says no sign truck driver tried to avoid collision with softball team bus

Softball Bus Crash_Cham640092914.jpg September 27, 2014: In this photo provided by The National Transportation Safety Board, officials examine part of the wreckage involved in a fatal highway accident in Davis, Okla. (AP Photo/National Transportation Safety Board)

A tractor-trailer that collided with a bus and killed four members of a Texas community college women’s softball team drove straight through an interstate median without any signs of braking or trying to avoid the collision, federal investigators said Sunday.

The truck was traveling northbound on Interstate 35 near Davis, Oklahoma, on Friday night. As the roadway gently curved to the right, the truck continued straight. It traveled about 820 feet through the median and struck the southbound bus carrying 15 members of the North Central Texas College team and driven by their coach, said Robert Sumwalt, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board.

Even after smashing into the driver side of the bus, the truck continued straight for another 300 feet, crossing the southbound lanes and barreling through and uprooting trees, Sumwalt said.

Asked if that suggested the driver was sleeping or otherwise indisposed, Sumwalt said: “That’s going to be the million dollar question.”

“Was it something with the vehicle or was it something with the operator of the vehicle?” he said.

Sumwalt said investigators found no problems with the truck’s brakes, but were still trying to download the truck’s data recorder, which could show if the brakes were applied.

Investigators were interviewing the softball players Sunday.

The Oklahoma Highway Patrol, which is conducting the criminal investigation, said Sunday that the truck driver, Russell Staley, 53, of Saginaw, Texas, told investigators he was distracted.

“He (Staley) said he was distracted by something in the cabin,” said Oklahoma Highway Patrol Capt. Ronnie Hampton, who declined to say what the distraction was. He said investigators don’t necessarily agree with Staley’s explanation.

No charges are pending against Staley.

Hampton said investigators have obtained search warrants to collect evidence from the truck and the bus.

The team was returning from a scrimmage against Southern Nazarene University in Bethany, Oklahoma.

The Oklahoma Highway Patrol identified the four players killed as Meagan Richardson, 19; Brooke Deckard, 20; Katelynn Woodlee, 18; and Jaiden Pelton 20. All were from North Texas.

A dozen others were injured although all but two have been treated and released. Oklahoma University Medical Center said Bailey Buchanan, 18, was upgraded Sunday from critical to stable condition. Rachel Hitt, 19, remained in fair condition at Norman Regional Hospital, a spokeswoman said.

Community members attended a prayer vigil Sunday night at the college’s Gainesville campus, just south of the Oklahoma/Texas border.

Staley was driving for Quickway Transportation of Nashville, Tennessee.

“Trusting in God’s grace, we hope to one day join the college in properly memorializing these ladies lives and their legacy,” CEO William Prevost said in a statement posted to the company’s website Sunday.

The statement didn’t refer to the truck driver.

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration records show Quickway had not been involved in a fatal accident in at least the past two years through Aug. 22. The company hadn’t faced federal safety-related penalties in at least six years, based on available records. Quickway has 327 registered trucks and 436 drivers.

The company’s out-of-service rate for safety violations — those that would lead a driver to be pulled off the road — was 7.5 percent, better than the national average of 20.7 percent, according to FMCSA.

Of 51 violations recorded in the past 24-month period, there were two instances of using a hand-held mobile device while driving. During that same period, there were no drug or alcohol violations.

Nationally, crashes involving a large truck or bus killed 4,281 people in 2013, little changed from the number of deaths in each of the previous three years.


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Investigator says no sign truck driver tried to avoid collision with softball team bus

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Uber driver charged in hammer attack on passenger

SAN FRANCISCO –  A driver for ride-sharing company Uber is accused of striking a passenger in the head with a hammer during a dispute over the route he was taking, the San Francisco District Attorney’s office said Friday.

Patrick Karajah, 26, picked up three people from a bar around 2 a.m. Tuesday and, while driving the passengers to their destination, he got into an argument with one of the passengers who questioned the route he was taking, according to court documents obtained by the San Francisco Chronicle.

The documents said that Karajah, who was driving for the basic UberX service, forced the passengers out of his car in the Bernal Heights neighborhood. Once the victim was out of the car, Karajah allegedly struck him on the side of his head with a hammer and drove away.

The victim suffered facial fracture and trauma to the head, and was taken to the hospital.

Karajah was arrested at his home in Pacifica.

He pleaded not guilty Thursday to charges of assault with a deadly weapon and battery with serious bodily injury.

Uber said in a statement that the company has suspended Karajah’s account and was prepared to assist authorities in any investigation.

“Safety is Uber’s No. 1 priority. We take reports like this seriously and are treating the matter with the utmost urgency and care,” the statement said.

A call to Karajah’s home went unanswered Friday evening.

His case comes the same week the district attorneys of San Francisco and Los Angeles threatened ride-sharing companies Uber, Lyft and Sidecar with legal action over how they screen drivers, charge passengers, among other business practices.





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Uber driver charged in hammer attack on passenger

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

JUTC driver on trial for stealing $650

A Jamaica Urban Transit Company (JUTC) driver is to face trial on June 30, after he was accused of stealing $650.

Jermain Welch, who appeared in the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate’s Court last Friday, pleaded not guilty and had his bail extended.

Allegations are that during a random inspection of tickets on a bus that Welch was driving, revenue officers found several discrepancies involving the bus tickets that he was issuing to passengers.

It is alleged that while the accused was being inspected, he ran from the bus with the cash and was chased by JUTC officials.

When asked why he ran from the bus with the cash, Welch told the court that he was intimidated by the JUTC officials. “It was not strange for them to find those tickets on me, but I was intimidated, and one of the supervisors came over me and said dat if him find a dollar over, me a go prison,” the accused said.

Senior Resident Magistrate Judith Pusey, who was listening keenly to the accused, said because he ran, that raised suspicion.


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JUTC driver on trial for stealing $650

Saturday, August 31, 2013

VIDEO: Truck driver killed in Stony Hill crash

Latest News

Wednesday, August 28, 2013 | 5:53 PM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — A truck driver was killed and his sideman hospitalised in serous condition after the truck in which they were travelling overturned along the Golden Spring main road in St Andrew Wednesday morning.The crash occurred shortly after 10:00am in the vicinity of the Brooks Level Road intersection just outside of the Stony Hill Square.Rescue workers could not say what led to the truck capsizing but speculations are that the driver lost control of the vehicle and it mounted the soft shoulder while negotiating the steep incline.More information later.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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VIDEO: Truck driver killed in Stony Hill crash

Monday, July 29, 2013

Spain crash driver was "careless"

29 July 2013 Last updated at 03:15 ET The train crash driver, seen arriving here arriving at court, “said he wanted to die” after the crash, a witness tells the BBC

The driver of the Spanish train that derailed last week killing 79 people says he was “careless” when he drove at speed around a bend, reports say.

Francisco Jose Garzon Amo was released from custody on Sunday. He faces multiple counts of reckless homicide.


A large funeral Mass is due to take place in city of Santiago de Compostela, where the train crashed.


Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who comes from the city, and members of the royal family are expected to attend.


Correspondents say the tragedy has shocked residents of Santiago de Compostela, a Catholic pilgrimage site in the north-western province of Galicia.


A woman cries next to a Galician flag with a black ribbon at the place where the train crashed. The area has been in shock since the accident

Santiago officials had been preparing for the religious feast of St James of Compostela – Spain’s patron saint – but cancelled it after the crash on Wednesday.


The city’s sports arena was temporarily turned into a morgue.


At the cathedral gates, pilgrims have left flowers and candles to commemorate victims of the crash.


Officials say 70 people remain in hospital, 22 of them in a critical condition.

Passport surrendered

Mr Garzon, 52, arrived at court in handcuffs on Sunday, his head scarred by an injury he suffered in the crash.


He was questioned behind closed doors for almost two hours by Judge Luis Alaez.


Later, a court statement said he had been released pending further investigations but must appear before a court once a week and is not allowed to leave Spain without permission.


His passport has been surrendered to the judge and his licence to drive a train has been suspended.


Rescue workers stand amongst the wreckage of the train crash near Santiago de Compostela on 25 July. The crash is one of the worst in Spanish history

Under Spanish law, his legal status is that he is suspected of being involved in 79 counts of reckless homicide but has not been formally charged.


But officials said he had admitted negligence by being careless when rounding a bend too fast.


Reports have suggested the train was going at 190km/h (118mph) as he took the bend, where the speed limit is just 80km/h.


All eight carriages of the train careered off the tracks into a concrete wall as they sped around the curve on the express route between Madrid and the port city of Ferrol on the Galician coast.


The crash was one of the worst rail disasters in Spanish history.


Trains crash map

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Spain crash driver was "careless"

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Spain train driver to be questioned

27 July 2013 Last updated at 23:10 ET Wreckage of the train near Santiago de Compostela (27 July) The crash was one of the worst rail disasters in recent Spanish history The driver of a train that crashed near the Spanish city of Santiago de Compostela on Wednesday killing 78 people is due to appear before a judge.


Francisco Jose Garzon Amo has been detained on suspicion of reckless homicide and the judge will decide whether to press formal charges.


Mr Garzon is suspected of driving too fast on a bend.


Reports say the train was travelling at more than double the speed limit at the time of the crash.


Mr Garzon, 52, was pictured being escorted away from the wreckage by police, blood pouring from a head injury. He left hospital on Saturday and was immediately taken to the central police station in Santiago.


He has so far refused to make a statement or answer questions.


Francisco Jose Garzon Amo Francisco Jose Garzon Amo suffered a head injury in the crash

Sunday’s court hearing will be closed but the judge will decide whether to remand the driver as an official suspect, release him on bail, or free him without charge.


If the judge finds enough evidence for a criminal trial, Mr Garzon will be charged and a date set.


At least 130 people were taken to hospital after the accident and 30 remained in a critical condition on Saturday.


All eight carriages of the train – packed with more than 200 passengers – careered off the tracks into a concrete wall as they sped around the curve on the express route between Madrid and the port city of Ferrol on the Galician coast.


Leaking diesel burst into flames in some of the carriages.


The train’s data recording “black box” is with the judge in charge of the investigation. Officials have so far not said how fast the train was going when it derailed.

Continue reading the main story August 2006: Inter-city train derails in Villada, in the province of Palencia, killing six people and injuring dozens moreJuly 2006: At least 43 people killed in a metro train crash in the Valencia area1972: Andalusia crash leaves between 76 and 86 people dead.1944: Hundreds believed dead after a crash in Torre del Bierzo, in Leon province – official account gave the figure as 78 killed. Gonzalo Ferre, president of Spanish rail network administrator Adif, said the driver should have started slowing the train 4km (2.5 miles) before the spot where the accident happened.

The president of Spanish train operator Renfe, Julio Gomez Pomar, has said that the train had no technical problems.


He said the driver had 30 years’ experience with the company and had been operating trains on the line for more than a year.


People from several nationalities were among the injured, including five US citizens and one Briton. One American was among the dead.


Some victims have had to be identified using DNA matches due to the extent of their injuries.


PM Mariano Rajoy, who hails from the city of the crash, declared three days of official mourning on Thursday.


The crash was one of the worst rail disasters in Spanish history.


Trains crash map

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Spain train driver to be questioned