San Francisco Train Operator's Actions Come Under Scrutiny Following Crash

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JASON DEAREN | 07/19/09 09:16 PM | AP

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SAN FRANCISCO — The operator of a light-rail train that crashed and injured dozens of passengers in San Francisco came under scrutiny Sunday as federal investigators tried to figure out why he inexplicably turned off the automatic controls moments before the collision.

National Transportation Safety Board investigator Ted Turpin did not know why the operator switched the controls from automatic to manual in a tunnel near the West Portal Station.

Had he kept the autopilot on, the train would have slowed down before arriving at the station and likely not careened into a parked train while going 23 mph, Turpin said. He added that the operator never engaged the emergency brake.

The crash injured 48 people, four seriously, in the latest in a series of commuter train wrecks in recent months in the U.S. None of the injuries were life-threatening.

Two Los Angeles-based NTSB investigators are working with transit officials to interview passengers, witnesses and focus on assessing the condition of the train tracks, signal systems and the structural integrity of the train cars involved. Also, investigators had not finished looking at whether the signaling system played a role.

A chaotic scene unfolded Saturday after the westbound train rear-ended the other train at a boarding platform. Rescue crews hurried to the scene and removed bloodied passengers, and the operator was pinned inside his damaged compartment, said San Francisco Fire Lt. Ken Smith.

"He was in the front of the train, and part of it was pushed into him," Smith said. "Rescuers had to pry open the doors to get to him and assist him out of the light rail vehicle."

Neither Turpin nor local transit officials would identify the driver, but said he started as a San Francisco bus driver in 1979 and switched to light rail in 2007. He was hospitalized after the crash and a drug test had been administered, which is standard procedure for crashes.

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Investigators will also be looking at whether cell phone use played a factor in the crash, as is standard in all train accident investigations, Turpin said.

The crash is the fourth major subway or commuter rail accident in the last 10 months.

In September, a commuter rail train crashed with a freight rail in Los Angeles and 25 people died. The crash was blamed on an engineer on the commuter rail texting on a cell phone. About 50 people were injured in Boston in May when a trolley rear-ended another trolley. The conductor admitted to texting when the crash took place. And last month, a subway train rear-ended another in Washington during rush hour, killing nine people.

In the San Francisco crash, investigators still need to interview the operators to determine the cause. Turpin said a mechanical inspection of the train that caused the accident has so far not uncovered any problems.

A day after the crash, cafes and shops in the western San Francisco neighborhood shopping district were still buzzing.

Ercan Bektas, 27, a waiter at the Squat and Gobble Cafe and Crepery, located at the intersection where the crash occurred, said he was startled by the sound.

"I was about to punch out, and heard something like a bomb," he said. Bektas said he ran outside to help people before rescue crews arrived.

"There was smoke coming out of one car. I went to help and I saw the car crushed," he said.

After the crash, witnesses said injured passengers, some with bloody wounds, sat on the station's boarding platform.

The most seriously injured were treated by rescue workers at a triage center, then taken on stretchers to waiting vehicles and whisked to hospitals.

On Sunday, the tunnel where the accident occurred was clear, and rail service had resumed.

The light rail is part of a mass-transit system that carries more than 200 million passengers a year in San Francisco, including on the city's famous cable cars and historic trolleys.

___

Associated Press Writers Evelyn Nieves and Tim Reiterman contributed to this report.

SAN FRANCISCO — The operator of a light-rail train that crashed and injured dozens of passengers in San Francisco came under scrutiny Sunday as federal investigators tried to figure out why he i...
SAN FRANCISCO — The operator of a light-rail train that crashed and injured dozens of passengers in San Francisco came under scrutiny Sunday as federal investigators tried to figure out why he i...
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California and train wreck must have been synonymous by now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:06 AM on 07/20/2009
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Ouch....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:20 AM on 07/20/2009
- dzent1 I'm a Fan of dzent1 81 fans permalink
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"...as federal investigators tried to figure out why he inexplicably turned off the automatic controls moments before the collision."

They could have failed, you know. Component failure happens all the time in electrical systems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 PM on 07/19/2009

Not a component failure. These trains have black boxes that tell transit authorities what switches are pulled when. Either this guy was late and trying to make time, or he was trying to end it all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 AM on 07/20/2009
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The train operator was twittering, of course.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 07/19/2009
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 227 fans permalink
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He heard Sarah was moving to the city.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 07/19/2009
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ON to the control panel. sorry. DOH!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 PM on 07/19/2009
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The train pictured is a BART train. However, the train involved in the accident is a MUNI Metro train. Different "animals"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 PM on 07/19/2009
- skyslimit I'm a Fan of skyslimit 4 fans permalink

no the picture i saw on the front paint is clearly a muni train, it's actually THE train that was in the accident you can tell by all the dents.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 PM on 07/19/2009

It's a Breda street trolley, not a BART train.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 PM on 07/19/2009
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The picture was changed from before...it is correct now (probably thanks to me)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 AM on 07/20/2009
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Probably dropped his cell phone ot to the control panel. DOH!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 PM on 07/19/2009
- chasmader I'm a Fan of chasmader 3 fans permalink
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No signal in the tunnel. Couldn't have been using a cell phone

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 AM on 07/20/2009
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