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  • Recommended: Texas grandfather accused in shooting deaths of son and grandson
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  • Updated
    7
    minutes
    ago

    60 injured, five critically, as trains collide in Connecticut

    By M. Alex Johnson and Carlo Dellaverson, NBC News

    Sixty people were injured, five of them critically, and rail traffic from New York to Boston was shut down after a Metro-North commuter train derailed and plowed into a second train Friday in Fairfield, Conn., Gov. Dan Malloy said.

    An eastbound train derailed at 6:10 p.m. ET and struck a westbound train between the Fairfield and Bridgeport stations, a Metropolitan Transportation Authority official told NBC News.

    60 people were injured after two commuter trains collided in Connecticut Friday at the peak of the evening commute. Authorities say the initial investigation shows the eastbound train derailed, colliding with a westbound train. NBC's Michelle Franzen reports.

    "We have no reason to think it was anything other than an accident, but that has to be explored," Malloy said.

    "We came to a sudden halt. We were jerked. There was smoke," Alex Cohen, a Canadian passenger on the westbound train en route to New York, told NBC Connecticut.

    "People were screaming; people were really nervous. We were pretty shaken up. They had to smash a window to get us out," he said.

    NBC Connecticut: 60 injured, five critically, in Metro-North train collision

    Malloy said 60 people were transported to area hospitals, most of them with only minor injuries. Five, however, were critically injured, one of them very critically, he said.

    The Metro-North train that departs New York City’s Grand Central Station for New Haven, Conn., at 4:41 p.m., with an estimated 300 passengers, derailed near the I-95 overpass in Bridgeport, MTA said in a statement. The train that leaves New Haven’s State Street station for Grand Central at 5:30 p.m., carrying about 400 passengers, struck the derailed train, the statement said.

    There was no immediate word on what caused the derailment or how fast either train was going. That will be determined by the National Transportation Safety Board, which will lead the investigation.

    Connecticut Gov. Dan Malloy gives details on the collision of two Metro-North trains, which injured 60 people and shut down rail traffic between New York and Boston.

    Amtrak services were suspended between New York and New Haven early Saturday, Amtrak said in a statement. Limited Northeast Regional services were available between Boston and New Haven, and all Amtrak services were operating normally between New York, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., the statement said.

    Metro-North, which runs between New York City and its northern suburbs in New York and Connecticut, is one of the busiest commuter rail services in the U.S. There are four tracks on that segment of the New Haven Line, MTA's statement said, but two are out of service for replacement of overhead wires.

    There was "extensive damage" to the track and the wire from the collision, MTA said. The train cars will remain in place until the investigation is completed. MTA gave no estimate for the duration of the investigation or subsequent repairs.

    Passengers should expect sharply curtailed service through the weekend and beyond, Malloy said. "We have a very old system on our Connecticut section. We're involved in hundreds of millions of dollars in replacement of that system.

    "It will slow the recovery," he said. "Obviously, we don't have alternative tracks to go to."

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    Christian Abraham / AP

    Emergency workers arrive at the scene of a train collision Friday, May 17, in Fairfield, Conn. Rail traffic is expected to be snarled for several days.

    This story was originally published on Fri May 17, 2013 7:18 PM EDT

    159 comments

    I wish them quick recovery

    Show more
    Explore related topics: connecticut, collision, trains, featured, updated, bridgeport-ct, fairfield-ct
  • 29
    Apr
    2013
    10:46pm, EDT

    One dead after small planes collide mid-air in Calif.

    NBCLosAngeles.com

    A single-engine Cessna lands near the third hole on Westlake Golf Course on Monday, April 29, 2013.

    By Samantha Tata, Rosa Ordaz and Beverly White, NBCLosAngeles.com

    A pilot died when a small plane collided mid-air with another plane that made an emergency landing on a nearby golf course in Southern California, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.


    The planes, both Cessnas, were flying at altitudes above 3,000 feet when they collided about 8 miles east, northeast of Ventura, according to FAA radar data.

    The first airplane was headed west at 3,500 feet. The second airplane was headed east at 3,100 feet. That plane had just departed Santa Monica for an engine test flight, said Allen Kenitzer, a spokesman with the FAA.

    The first plane made an emergency landing after 2 p.m. near the third hole at the Westlake Golf Course in Westlake Village (map). The second airplane crashed into mountainous terrain in Calabasas, sparking a 1 acre brush fire.

    The pilot in that crash died.

    All three people aboard the plane that landed on the golf course survived, said Deputy Mark Pope, of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. At least one of them was injured.

    The plane is registered to AmeriFlyers, a Dallas-based flight school with a Santa Monica location.

    The golf course was open at the time the plane made its rough landing, but no one on the ground was injured.

    The sound of a low-flying aircraft scared golfers off the driving range and into the shop.

    The second plane was found about the same time Monday as firefighters responded to a brush fire sparked by aircraft debris, about 5 miles away from the golf course.

    33 comments

    LeaveItAlone, Your correct about your below statement of direction of flight and the altitudes required. But what so many Non Aviators do not realize is, an aircraft in VFR conditions (visual flight rules). Are Not required to use (ATC) Air Traffic Control, unless they are in Controled Airspace.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: plane, california, collision, mid-air, nbclosangeles
  • 30
    Jan
    2013
    11:35am, EST

    10 injured when NJ Transit train collides with tractor-trailer during rush hour

    NBC 4 New York

    Two people were seriously injured in the crash in Little Falls, N.J., officials said.

    By Brian Thompson and Sheldon Dutes, NBCNewYork.com

    An NJ Transit train full of commuters collided with a tractor-trailer in Little Falls, N.J., at the height of the Wednesday morning rush, injuring 10 people, including two seriously.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    NJ Transit spokesman John Durso Jr. said the train was carrying 71 passengers and crew when it hit the back of the trailer shortly before 8:30 a.m. Wednesday.

    Durso said the seriously injured include an NJ Transit employee who had been aboard the train and a school crossing guard who authorities say was struck by debris.

    Read more from NBCNewYork.com

    The driver of the tractor-trailer, which had been carrying paint, was not seriously injured, authorities said. Dozens of yellow buckets were seen strewn around the tracks and road near the crumpled truck.

    NBC 4 New York

    The driver of the truck involved in the accident was not believed to have been seriously injured.

    Durso said a preliminary investigation reveals the tractor-trailer was backing up after failing to make a tight turn when the crossing gates came down. The train didn't have time to stop, he said.  

    The diesel-engine train was running on New Jersey's Montclair-Boonton line.

    NJ Transit said the 8:11 a.m. train and 9:13 a.m. train on that line were canceled because of the crash, and passengers are advised to use bus service. Later train service experienced some delays.

    Durso couldn't say whether the accident would affect service during the evening commute. Main Street remained blocked off for several blocks around the accident site throughout the morning.

     

    29 comments

    Ebeneser.....I am not taking one side or another in the national gun safety debate. But, your argument is so stupid and juvenile.....or should I say your example is so stupid and juvenile.....that it actually detracts from what you are trying to accomplish, which I presume is that the gun laws are A …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: collision, new-jersey, little-falls, nj-transit, nbcnewyork, tractor-trailor
  • 16
    Nov
    2012
    11:45am, EST

    Wounded vet dies saving wife on parade float in Texas train accident

    Cory Rogers speaks with TODAY's Savannah Guthrie about his  friend retired Army Staff Sergeant Joshua Michael, who died while saving his wife when the float they were riding in a Texas parade was hit by a train.

    By NBC News staff

    One of the veterans killed when a train crashed into a parade float in Texas on Thursday is being hailed as a “hero” for saving his wife just moments before he lost his own life.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Joshua Michael, a 34-year-old Army staff sergeant and recipient of two Purple Heart decorations, pushed his wife, Daylyn, off the trailer just before the train hit, according to a family friend. At least 17 people were injured, one critically, and four were killed as a result of the accident, Midland city officials said. 

    Twenty-four veterans and their spouses were on the tractor-trailer, according to the Midland Reporter-Telegram.  

    “I think it was just pandemonium more than anything else,” Corey Rogers, a close friend of the Michael family, said on TODAY. “Obviously, Joshua had the reaction of a real man.”


    Daylyn survived and was not one of the 17 injured. Her husband was transported to Midland Memorial Hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Rogers said Daylyn flew back to her home shortly after to be with her family. Rogers did the interview with TODAY on her behalf.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    “I think everybody’s still in shock just trying to take the news in,” Rogers said. “That’s not easy news to share with anyone, let alone kids who’ve seen their dad go to war and come back and have just now kind of gotten him back, really, in their lives.”

    Rogers described Michael as a family man and an “all-around American hero” who liked to hunt and play the guitar and drums.

    On Friday, police confirmed the identities of the other three victims of the accident.

    Army Sgt. Maj. Gary Stouffer, 37, and Army Sgt. Maj. Lawrence Boivin, 47, were pronounced dead at the scene. Army Sgt. Maj. William Lubbers was pronounced dead at Midland hospital.

    Sixteen people were hurt and four veterans lost their lives on in Midland, Texas, where a Union Pacific freight train crashed into two flatbed tractor-trailers. NBC's Janet Shamlian reports.

    NBC station KWES of Midland said the tractor-trailer was part of the Show of Support / Hunt for Heroes parade carrying veterans and their spouses to a banquet in their honor. The benefit dinner was being put on by Show of Support, Military Hunt Inc. in Midland on Thursday night, according to the organization's website.

    The parade and banquet were leading up to a whitetail deer-hunting trip for the veterans, according to the Midland Reporter-Telegram. Show of Support president and founder Terry Johnson told KEWS that the events were canceled.

    According to the website, the organization demonstrates support for members of the military and seeks to bring public awareness of hunting and fishing.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    Midland Police spokesman Ryan Stout said the crash occurred at 4:36 p.m. local time when an eastbound train hit the flatbed trailer. He said the flatbed was the last of two in the parade attempting to cross the tracks.

    The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the crash. At a news conference in Midland on Friday, NTSB spokesman Mark Rosekind said the crossing had flashing lights as well as gate arms, but board had not determined if those were functioning at the time of the accident.

    Rosekind said the locomotive had a forward-facing video camera and a sheriff's vehicle directly behind the float had a dashboard camera, and the images would be analyzed in Washington. 

    He said there had been 10 train-vehicle collisions at that intersection between 1979 and 1997, but nothing there since then. None of the 10 collisions involved fatalities, he said.

    There have been 477 railway-related fatalities between January and August of this year, according to federal railroad safety data. Of those, 93 were related to Union Pacific Railroad, which covers 23 states across the western United States.

    In a statement, Union Pacific spokesman Tom Lange said the crossing in Midland has a gate and lights.

    “Our preliminary investigation indicates that the lights and gates were operating at the time. Additionally our two person crew sounded the locomotive horn,” Lange said.

    Lange said the two-person Union Pacific crew was uninjured.

    The National Transportation Safety Board told NBC News that a team has been sent to investigate the accident.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

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    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    285 comments

    One of the veterans killed when a train crashed into a parade float in Texas on Thursday is being hailed as a “hero” for saving his wife just moments before he lost his own life. Yes, he is. Heartbreaking. Condolences to all affected in this horrible tragedy.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, collision, veterans, trains, featured, midland-texas, commentid-featured
  • 15
    Nov
    2012
    7:29pm, EST

    Train hits trailer carrying wounded veterans during Texas parade; 4 dead

    Four people were killed and 17 injured when a flatbed trailer carrying twelve veterans and their spouses during a Midland, Texas, parade was hit by freight train as it was crossing over railroad tracks. NBC's Janet Shamlian reports.

    By NBC News staff

    Updated at 8:04 a.m. ET: A train crashed into a tractor-trailer carrying wounded veterans and their spouses in a parade in Midland, Texas, killing at least four people, authorities told NBC News.

    At least 17 people were hospitalized, city officials said. Twenty-four veterans and their spouses were on the tractor-trailer, according to the Midland Reporter-Telegram.  

    NBC station KWES of Midland said the tractor-trailer was part of the Show of Support / Hunt for Heroes parade carrying veterans and their spouses to a banquet in their honor. The benefit dinner was being put on by Show of Support, Military Hunt Inc. in Midland on Thursday night, according to the organization's website.

    Cory Rogers speaks with TODAY's Savannah Guthrie about his  friend retired Army Staff Sergeant Joshua Michael, who died while saving his wife when the float they were riding in a Texas parade was hit by a train.

    Midland police spokesman Ryan Stout said the crash occurred at 4:36 p.m. local time when an eastbound train hit the flatbed trailer. He said the flatbed was the last of two in the parade attempting to cross the tracks.


    "It's hard to look at. It's a very tragic event, very unfortunate," Midland Police Chief Price Robinson told Reuters.

    James Durbin / Midland Reporter-Telegram

    Bystanders react after a flatbed tractor-trailer carrying wounded veterans and their families during a parade was struck by a train Thursday in Midland, Texas.

    The parade and banquet were leading up to whitetail deer-hunting trip for the veterans, according to the Midland Reporter-Telegram. Show of Support president and founder Terry Johnson told the KEWS that the events were canceled.

    According to the website, the organization demonstrates support for members of the military and seeks to bring public awareness of hunting and fishing.

    There have been 477 railway-related fatalities between January and August of this year, according to federal railroad safety data. Of those, 93 were related to Union Pacific Railroad, which covers 23 states across the western United States.

    National Transportation Safety Board chairwoman Debbie Hersman tells TODAY's Savannah Guthrie that there were some forward-facing cameras on the train involved in Thursday's deadly collision with a parade float in Midland, Texas.

    In a statement, Union Pacific spokesman Tom Lange said the crossing has a gate and lights.

    “Our preliminary investigation indicates that the lights and gates were operating at the time. Additionally our two person crew sounded the locomotive horn,” Lange said.

    Lange said the two-person Union Pacific crew was uninjured.

    The National Transportation Safety Board told NBC News that a team has been sent to investigate the accident.

    A train crashed into a flatbed trailer carrying wounded veterans at a parade in Midland, Texas, on Thursday. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

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    216 comments

    As a retired locomotive engineer I can poitively say that there is no work experience worse than hitting and killing someone while operating a train. The sad part is this could have been avoided. If a city or group is planning on having a parade or event near the track all they have to do is contact …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, collision, veterans, trains, featured, midland-texas
  • 29
    Jun
    2012
    10:24am, EDT

    Five killed, 1 injured after tow truck and car collide in Pennsylvania

    NBCPhiladelphia.com

    A car and tow truck collided in Lehigh County, Pa., killing five people. The passenger in the tow truck survived and was taken to the hospital.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Five people were killed and another was injured when a tow truck and a car collided Thursday afternoon in eastern Pennsylvania, police said.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    State Police Cpl. Mark Rowlands said the car ran a stop sign and was hit by a tow truck on a rural road in Heidelberg Township, about 15 miles outside of Allentown, Pa. All four people in the car – three males and one female – and the man driving the tow truck died in the collision, which happened around 2:35 p.m. Thursday, according to a police press release.

    A male passenger in the tow truck suffered non-life threatening injuries and was taken to Lehigh Valley Hospital-Cedar Crest.

    Images of the collision aftermath show the car badly mangled beneath the tow truck, which was hauling a box truck at the time of the crash.


    Police said the vehicles crashed into a utility pole, causing more than 200 customers of PPL, a utility provider in Allentown, to lose power.

    PPL spokesman Michael Wood told msnbc.com the routine outage allowed rescue crews to remove bodies from the vehicles and clean up downed power lines.

    Power was fully restored about six hours after the crash. 

    A spokesman for the Lehigh County coroner’s office told msnbc.com Friday that officials were still trying to identify victims of the crash and contact their families.  

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    44 comments

    Glad I was not a cop or a paramedic on this one. Hats off to first responders. tough job.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, collision, lehigh-county, heidelberg-township
  • 6
    Jan
    2012
    4:37pm, EST

    Three trains collide in Indiana, setting off fire

    Three trains collide in rural Indiana on Friday, creating concerns over hazardous materials. Msnbc.com's Al Stirrett reports.

    By BJ Lutz and Jeff Goldblatt, NBCChicago.com

     

    Three freight trains, one of them carrying ethanol, were involved in an accident Friday afternoon in Porter County, Ind., officials said.

    One westbound train was stopped on the tracks in a remote stretch of Porter County between Washington and Jackson townships when a second train rear-ended it. An eastbound train on a parallel track collided with the debris from the original collision, explained Sgt. Larry LaFlower with the Porter County Sheriff's Department.

    See photos, video, more coverage at NBCChicago.com

    The trains were owned by CSX Transportation. The company said the cars were carrying a "wide variety of freight," including three rail cars of flammable products.

    "No significant leaks or spills of hazardous materials appear to have occurred but inspections of all loaded and empty hazardous materials cars are under way," said CSX spokeswoman Carla Groleau. "An investigation to determine what happened is also under way."

    Two people from the second train were transported to Porter Hospital in Valparaiso with non-life threatening injuries.

    Black, billowing smoke could be seen up to 10 miles away from the accident site, near county roads 550 East and 600 North.

    Police shut down several roads in the area and all homes within one mile of the accident scene -- about 100 people -- were evacuated.

    Crews said they're concerned about hazardous materials on the train and are working to figure out how to contain the fire.

    "They're treating the area right now because they're not sure what they have," said Porter County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Lynn Williams.

    The accident was reported at about 1:30 p.m., with police and fire officials, as well as Porter County Emergency Management and hazardous material officials responding. Officials from the National Transportation Safety Board were on the scene by 4:45 p.m.

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    90 comments

    If that movie Super8 taught me anything, at least 2 aliens excaped during the crash.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: train, collision, indiana, trains-collide
  • 1
    Dec
    2011
    5:30pm, EST

    1 killed, 16 injured in 50-car pileup in Tenn.

    Mark Humphrey / AP

    A firefighter works at a crash site on Thursday in Hendersonville, Tenn. One person was dead and several were injured in a chain-reaction crash.

    By NBC News and news services

     A small car plowed into the back of a mail truck early Thursday, killing one person in one of several chain-reaction collisions of 50 cars on a fogbound highway near Nashville.

    The name of the deceased victim has been identified as 28-year-old Paul Warren of Hendersonville, Tenn.

    Police were treating the incident as four separate wrecks that all happened within the span of a few minutes in Hendersonville, Tenn.

    Hendersonville police say the series of wrecks began at 6:56 a.m.  Traffic stopped and another pile-up happened.  The third pile-up was the one that caused Warren's death.  The fourth crash happened shortly thereafter.


     The wrecks covered a two-mile stretch of Vietnam Vets Boulevard, beginning roughly at the bridge over Gallatin Road and ending close to the Saundersville Road exit.

    Read the original story on WSMV

    Thick fog and black ice are possible factors in the crashes.  A Hendersonville police lieutenant says there was black ice on the roadway, but investigators have not determined that to be the official cause of the pileup.

    16 others injured
    Eight people were taken to Hendersonville Medical Center with minor injuries and later released, according to hospital spokeswoman Shawna Zodi.

    Eight other people, two children and six adults, were transported to Sumner Regional Medical Center with non-life threatening injuries.

    As the fog lifted, damaged vehicles could be seen along a couple of miles of Vietnam Veterans Parkway in Hendersonville.

    "I would compare it to a racetrack when there's been a pileup," said Ray McLaughlin, a district chief with the Hendersonville Fire Department. "Everyone started bouncing off one another."

    The chief said emergency workers counted 179 vehicles stopped at the crash scene, 50 of which had collided.

    Other than the one death, most of the injuries were neck and back complaints, McLaughlin said.

    One school bus was involved, but no children were hurt, said Sgt. Jim Vaughn with Hendersonville police.

    People involved in the wreck who were not injured were taken to the Sumner County Administration building in Gallatin.

    Traffic returned to normal at about 12:30 p.m.

    This article includes reporting from NBC station WSMV in Nashville and The Associated Press.

    More news and feature stories from msnbc.com: 

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    62 comments

    yes that fog and black ice is a deadly mix. Black ice by its self is bad enough,but fog and people who think they don't have to slow down make for some real pain for a lot of folks. But rules apply to others not me , huh? They never learn until it is too late.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: injuries, collision, traffic, highway, tenn, hendersonville

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