Belgium’s Head-On Collision Of Two Trains Kills 18
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/02/15/belgium.train.crash/?hpt=Sbin
The accident is being called the worst rail crash in Belgium in 25 years.
The crash took place in Halle, during the morning rush hour at 8:30 a.m. local time and 2:30 a.m. Eastern Time.
Railway operators Infrabel and SNBC said they didn’t know yet what caused the accident.
It took 30 minutes for rescue crew to get to the scene.
The number of those killed or hurt seemed tentative at best. At one point the mayor of Halle said that 20 passengers had died.
As the full extent of this tragedy is assessed, we hope that the issue of brain injury will get the attention it deserves. As we commented at length in our blogs after the Jamaica Air Crash, brain injury is virtually assured in accidents of this severity, even with those who walk away from the crash.
See:
http://www.tbilaw.com/blog/2009/12/christmas-miracle-in-jamaica.html
http://www.tbilaw.com/blog/2009/12/followup-to-injuries-in-jamaica-air.html
One Year and 34 Lawsuits Later, Controversy Over the Fatal Continental 3407 Crash in Buffalo Continues
Survivors of some of the victims killed in the Feb. 12, 2009 crash, which killed 49 on board the plane and a man in the house it crashed into near Buffalo, N.Y., planned to take four-hour walk today to commemorate the tragedy. http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/02/families_to_walk_in_honor_of_v.html
Jeffrey Skiles, the co-pilot of the “Miracle on the Hudson” flight, was take part in the walk, which will go from the crash site in Clarence, N.Y., to Buffalo Niagra International Airport. The flight originated in Newark International Airport.
The goal is to “complete the flight” on behalf of the loved ones killed in the accident.
Since the crash, spouses and children of the crash victims have filed suit against Continental Airlines and Colgan Air, the regional airline that was operating the flight on behalf of Continental. The other defendants include Colgan parent Pinnacle Airlines, plane manufacturer Bombardier Aerospace and FlightSafety International, which helped train the pilots.
The victims’ families are seeking compensation for negligence, wrongful death and punitive damages.
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Feb. 2 that the pilot’s faulty response, over-correcting, to a low-speed warning resulting in the plane crashing into a home and creating a fireball five miles from the Buffalo airport.
The pilot of Flight 3407 was distracted, seemingly more interested in flirting and chatting with his young female first officer. He was also making fast-food wages, $16,000; had failed three flight exams and had no sleep the night before the fatal flight.
The NTSB made 25 safety recommendations after its probe into the crash to the Federal Aviation Administration, which will evaluate them.
The Associated Press did a critical story Friday questioning whether enough has been to done to prevent future accidents involving regional carriers, which is says now make up half of domestic departures. http://www.latimes.com/business/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-us-faa-airline-safety,0,7865987.story
FAA chief Randy Babbitt has said he is “very pleased with the progress” and safety measures his agency has taken since the crash, but many are critical and don’t think enough has been done. Those include members of Congress and the NTSB, according to the AP story.
For example, some legislators and survivors of the crash victims want flight experience for co-pilots increased to 1,500 from 250 hours. Airlines and flight schools have balked at that suggestion.
The FAA has requested public input on whether commercial pilot certification should be changed. http://www.courthousenews.com/2010/02/11/Federal_Regulations.htm
Bus Collides With Metro Train In Houston
A Houston bus driver who allegedly ran a red light and hit a Metro train Monday was suspended without pay, according to the Houston Chronicle. http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/hotstories/6859080.html
Reginald Rideout, who was treated and released from a hospital after Monday’s accident, will be under suspension while a probe o the crash is conducted.
According to Metro officials, 50-year-o1d Rideout has had three accidents.
The crash earlier this week injured nine people, and Metro service was temporarily suspended.
New Federal Guidelines Bar Commercial Truck and Bus Drivers From Texting
U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood made the announcement about the ban, which is aimed at preventing accidents caused by distracted truck and bus drivers. The ban took effect immediately.
“We want the drivers of big rigs and buses and those who share the roads with them to be safe,” LaHood said in a press release, http://www.dot.gov/affairs/2010/dot1410.htm. “This is an important safety step, and we will be taking more to eliminate the threat of distracted driving,”
News of the ban was widely reported by the national media, including The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/27/technology/27distracted.html, and CNN, http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/01/26/trucks.texting.ban/?hpt=T1.
Truckers or bus drivers who violate the new guidelines will be subject to civil or criminal penalties of up to $2,750.
Right now 19 states bar drivers from texting behind the wheel, according to the Ventura, Calif., County Star, http://www.vcstar.com/news/2010/jan/28/an-obvious-direction-to-go/?print=1.
Its story points out that a tragic 2008 Metrolink commuter train crash, which killed 25 people and injured 135, was mainly blamed on a train engineer texting just prior to the crash.
That story also cites a July study by the Virgina Tech Transportation Institute, which determined that drivers are six times more likely to get in an accident if they are talking or texting on their cell. That survey also found that truckers using a mobile device are 23 times more likely to have a collision.
DOT this week cited Research by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), which found that drivers who send and receive text messages take their eyes off the road for an average of 4.6 seconds out of every 6 seconds while texting.
“At 55 miles per hour, this means that the driver is traveling the length of a football field, including the end zones, without looking at the road,” the DOT press release says. “Drivers who text while driving are more than 20 times more likely to get in an accident than non-distracted drivers. Because of the safety risks associated with the use of electronic devices while driving, FMCSA is also working on additional regulatory measures that will be announced in the coming months.”
During the September Distracted Driving Summit, LaHood announced that DOT would pursue regulatory action, as well as rulemakings, to reduce the risks posed by distracted driving.
President Obama also signed an Executive Order directing federal employees not to engage in text messaging while driving government-owned vehicles or with government-owned equipment. Federal employees were required to comply with the ban starting Dec. 30.
The regulatory guidance the DOT texting ban are now in the Federal Register.
DOT also has a Web site, http://distraction.gov, where it warns drivers about the perils of driving while using their cell phones, eating, adjusting their radio or text messaging.
Truck Driver Carelessness Severely Injures Man’s Face
http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/1978774,ice-shatters-mans-face-010710.article Regardless of whether it violates Illinois law, it is a clear violation of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations pertaining to Inspection and Maintenance of Equipment.
In the Illinois wreck, according to the Sun Times:
A commercial truck — topped with about a foot-and-a-half of snow and ice — was westbound on Butterfield Road between Illinois Route 59 and Eola Road in Aurora about 10 a.m. Monday as Peter Morano was driving in the eastbound lane. When the truck passed under a viaduct, the ice on top of it became unlodged and was sent soaring toward Morano’s windshield.
“It was like an explosion,” Morano recalled while resting at home Wednesday after being released from the hospital.
Under the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations each driver is required to make sure that his load is safe when he begins a trip, to inspect it after 50 miles and also at least every 150 miles. Slabs of ice on the top of a truck parked outside this time of year are foreseeable. Any reasonable driver would assure that such ice does not accumulate. This driver was clearly negligent. Fortunately it was not negligent homicide.
The Sun Times goes on to report that Morano suffered no brain injury. As I have stated repeatedly on other blogs, there is simply no way to tell in the first few hours after a blow to the head whether a brain injury has occurred, because brain injury is a process, not an event. See http://www.tbilaw.com/blog/2009/12/concussion-diagnosis-still-critical-for.html
Before brain injury can be completely ruled out in Morano, he must go back to a medical professional and be tested for amnesia. See my series of videos on this point at http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney#p/u/13/x2EKaVHpVd0
Ship helmsman sentenced to 10 months for oil spill
For more on the Exxon Valdez case resolution in June, go to http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-exxon-valdez16-2009jun16,0,7865562.story
For the 2008 Supreme Court decision in the case, go to http://www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/07pdf/07-219.pdf
Attorney Gordon Johnson
http://fishtail.tv
http://tbilaw.com
Date: 7/17/2009 6:54 PM
JARED GRIGSBY,Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The helmsman of a cargo ship that set off a major environmental disaster in the San Francisco Bay was sentenced Friday to 10 months in prison.
John Cota pleaded guilty in March to two misdemeanor environmental crimes of illegally discharging oil in the bay and killing thousands of birds.
Cota apologized to the court and to the “people of the Bay Area for the damage I have caused.”
Cota’s attorney, Jeff Bornstein, had asked U.S. District Judge Susan Illston to impose a two-month sentence.
Bornstein argued that his client wasn’t the only person responsible for the Nov. 7, 2007, oil spill that poured more than 53,000 gallons of oil into the water after the 901-foot Cosco Busan struck a tower of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge in heavy fog. The spill killed 2,000 birds, fouled dozens of miles of coastline and cost commercial fishermen millions of dollars in lost revenue.
A poorly trained Chinese crew, language barriers and others factors beyond Cota’s control contributed to the accident, Bornstein said.
“This was an accident, a chain of errors and lots of people played a role in it,” Bornstein said.
Illston, however, said Cota was hired to guide the ship out of the San Francisco Bay because of his extensive knowledge of the region and should have known where the bridge was located.
“You have a structure that has not moved from its position for many, many years,” she said.
The judge also agreed with prosecutors that Cota made several disastrously poor decisions while piloting the ship. Authorities have said he shouldn’t have departed in extreme fog when pilots of six other large vessels decided not to, failed to have a discussion with the ship’s master to review the transit plan and failed to notify the Coast Guard that the ship’s radar was unreliable.
“I know there is a lot of blame to go around,” Illston said. “But, I think Capt. Cota was right in the middle of it.”
About a dozen family and friends from Cota’s hometown of Petaluma crowded into the courtroom to also urge the judge for a more lenient sentence than the 10 months demanded by federal prosecutors.
Teresa Barrett, Cota’s wife, told the judge that the family has spent more than $500,000 on legal fees and faced even more financial punishment because of several lawsuits pending against Cota from fishermen and others seeking to recover expenses caused by the spill.
“We risk losing the only home our sons have known,” she said before breaking down in tears.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.
DMV: Driver in Calif. crash lacked bus license
By SAMANTHA YOUNG
Associated Press Writer
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) _ The bus that crashed and killed eight people on a Northern California road was driven by a man who wasn’t properly licensed and owned by another man who had claimed to be the vehicle’s only driver, state officials said Tuesday.
The California Highway Patrol is investigating whether the bus that crashed Sunday north of Sacramento was inspected annually, as required by law. They also are looking at whether drugs or alcohol were a factor.
The bus driver, 52-year-old Quintin Watts, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence Monday while he was still hospitalized for his injuries. Watts didn’t have the proper license to carry more than 10 passengers, said Mike Marando, a DMV spokesman.
“He wasn’t authorized to drive a bus in the state of California,” Marando explained. “It is the responsibility of the bus company owner to make sure the driver is properly licensed, and that was not the case here.”
Patrol officers believe the bus owner was Daniel Cobb, 68, who died in the crash. State public records show that Cobb was insured and had a valid permit from the Public Utilities Commission to operate a bus service.
Under the permit, however, Cobb listed only himself and not Watts as the sole driver of the single bus he had registered with the commission, agency officials said.
“Mr. Cobb certified under penalty of perjury that he had no employees and was therefore not required to maintain workers’ compensation insurance,” said Paul Wuerstle, the commission’s head of transportation enforcement.
A witness said the bus carrying 42 passengers to Colusa Casino Resort drifted off a rural two-lane road before the driver “overcorrected” and swerved back. It overturned and rolled completely over, ending up on its wheels facing the opposite direction. About 30 people were injured. Many of the passengers were Laotian seniors.
The bus had an invalid license plate, the CHP said.
Watts’ family issued a statement through Woodland Hospital, where he is recovering from injuries in the crash.
“We would like to share our condolences to those who have lost their loved ones and also let everyone know we are praying for those who are still in the hospital,” the statement said.
Watts’ adoptive parents said they were told by friends and family members that Cobb was Watts’ stepfather. Cobb had been married to Watts’ biological mother before she died about 10 years ago, said Cleval Watts, who adopted Quintin Watts when he was 6 months old.
He added that Quintin Watts was diabetic and taking insulin.
Passengers who survived the crash tell social workers that the bus driver appeared to have dozed off and passengers tried to warn him before the vehicle rolled off the road and tumbled into a drainage ditch.
“The bus driver was sleepy and the bus swung to the left and right side. And they were yelling at him on the third swing when it turned over,” said Theresa Saechao of Lao Family Community Development of Sacramento.
Safety advocates and bus industry experts said Tuesday tour bus companies that transport gamblers to casinos don’t always follow government regulations designed to assure passenger safety.
“Some of these rogue operations literally do pickups in alleys where they are trying to keep out of the sight of federal and state authorities,” said Eron Shosteck, spokesman at the American Bus Association, a Washington, D.C.,-based group that represents about 1,000 motorcoach and tour companies in the U.S. and Canada.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration regulates buses that cross state lines, but tour buses that operate in only one state such as Cobbs Bus Service are a state responsibility.
All commercial buses that travel within California undergo annual inspections by the highway patrol, but in cases where companies don’t have bus terminals, CHP spokesman Scott Johnson said, “we don’t go. If there’s no terminal they don’t respond.”
A bus terminal couldn’t be located for Cobbs Bus Service, which listed a Modesto church and a residence in Sacramento as its headquarters.
Still, the highway patrol told the Public Utilities Commission in October 2007 that Cobb’s operation had passed all necessary inspections and that his permit could be renewed for another three years, Wuerstle said.
Cobb had a permit to operate a bus service in the state since 1974 and had no indications on his record of any past safety violations, Wuerstle said. The commission is not automatically notified if a bus driver has been in an accident, he said.
Records show Watts, of Stockton, had been cited for speeding and other violations that resulted in loss of his license for nearly two years. He regained his driving privileges last January.
___
Associated Press Writer Marcus Wohlsen in San Francisco and Judy Lin in Sacramento contributed to this report.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Train crash probe renews focus on texting dangers
By JOCELYN NOVECK
AP National Writer
One day last summer, Jim Messer, a Florida attorney, was nearly run off the road by another car. When he recovered, he says, he was able to see the other driver texting on her cell phone, balancing it on the wheel.
“There’s gotta be a law against this,” Messer thought. But there wasn’t — not in his state, anyway. He’s been working since then to get one passed.
Despite a general belief on the part of researchers and authorities that texting at the wheel, like other driver distractions, could be jeopardizing lives, only five states and the District of Columbia currently ban all drivers from doing it.
Now investigators are looking into whether texting may have played a role in the disastrous California train crash that killed 25. Two teenage train buffs told a TV station that the engineer, who was killed, sent them a text message a minute before the crash. A phone was not found.
For now, there is no data directly tying text messaging to traffic accidents. Though fully 74 percent of Americans aged 18-29 use text messaging, according to the Pew Research Center, it’s a phenomenon that’s only a few years old.
But a 2006 government study found that distracted drivers of all sorts were involved in nearly eight out of 10 collisions or near-crashes. And everyone knows that checking e-mails or sending a text message, just like talking on a cell phone or playing with the radio, can distract a driver. A researcher who worked on the 2006 study, Charlie Klauer of the Virginia Tech Traffic Institute, says the crash risk was doubled when a driver looked away from the road for two seconds out of six.
“Texting is potentially even more risky than speaking on a cell phone, because you’re not only taking your mind off the road — you’re taking your eyes off the road,” argues Russ Rader of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
But it’s very hard to prove, in the aftermath of a crash, that texting or e-mailing was the cause. Police in upstate New York found a series of messages sent and received from 17-year-old Bailey Goodman’s phone just before her sport utility vehicle slammed into a tractor-trailer one night in June last year, killing her and four friends who’d all just graduated from high school. But they couldn’t tell if she was the one using her phone.
It was enough for a state senator to propose a bill banning texting while driving in New York, where using a hand-held cell phone has been banned since 2001. The bill remains in committee. Only Alaska, Washington, Louisiana, Minnesota, New Jersey and the District of Columbia currently ban all drivers from texting, according to the IIHS; 12 other states have partial bans, such as drivers under 18 or bus drivers.
One emergency room doctor says he suspects most people don’t initiate text messages while driving — but can’t help themselves from responding to them.
“It’s hard to ignore the temptation,” says Dr. Mark Melrose of Mountainside Hospital in Montclair, N.J., a spokesman for the American College of Emergency Physicians. “You think, this might be important, I’d better check. You know you shouldn’t be doing it, but you do it anyway.”
That’s an apt way to describe the habits of Liz Osaki, 23, who works at an advertising agency on the outskirts of Boston. Her daily commute is about an hour each way. And yes, she texts at the wheel, though mostly when she’s in traffic, or stopped at a light. Even when she’s not, “I promise I am still looking at the road,” she says.
The only mishaps Osaki reports are occasionally missing the moment a light turns from red to green, or not realizing as fast as she should that cars in front have braked suddenly. She argues that texting can actually be safer in the car than speaking on a cell phone.
“I think it’s less distracting because when I’m texting, I can always just throw the phone down,” she says. “You can’t do that in the middle of a phone conversation.”
More to the point is the fact that for Osaki, like many young Americans, texting has become second nature, often a preferred means of communication to speaking on the phone.
“I text to ask simple questions, and get simple answers,” she says. “Most of my friends don’t even like to check their voicemail.” Her recent phone bill was proof of Osaki’s habit: She had 1,000 text messages on it, she says. That’s more than 30 messages a day.
That’s nothing compared to Lily Brynes, a 17-year-old New Yorker who figures she texts about 100 times a day on weekends, less so during school. It’s almost as if talking on the phone has become awkward, she says — “and my whole generation hates voice mail.”
The teenager adds that even fights are conducted on the phone, in carefully calibrated language. “‘Love you’ — that’s a normal signoff between female friends,” she says. “If she says ‘Love u,’ she’s busy.’” And the initials “l” and “y”? “That means she’s angry.”
Lily’s mother, Karen Binder-Brynes, is in awe. “It’s amazing how this generation has created an entirely new language,” she says. And texting is clearly the territory of the young. The Pew Research survey, conducted in the spring, showed that while 78 percent of all adults own a cell phone, only 24 percent of those over 50 used it to text, and only 6 percent of those over 65.
Moreover, though three-quarters of the 18-29 age group use texting, the number is surely much higher among teenagers, who weren’t counted. Researchers add that U.S. teenagers still lag behind those overseas. An amazing 98 percent of teens in the developed world engage in texting, says Jeff Cole, director of the Center for the Digital Future at the University of Southern California.
“What Americans don’t realize quite yet is just what a natural, ingrained part of communication texting is,” says Cole. He notes that teenagers in some countries even prefer to write papers and letters on a 12-button phone keypad rather than the usual computer keyboard.
Does this mean that teens of the future will be able to text in their cars, without even looking down at their phones? Not likely. And safety advocates like Messer, in Florida, are pushing their legislatures to adopt bans across the country.
But Osaki, for one, is skeptical that such bans can work.
“I’m not really sure how it could be enforced,” she says. “And I feel like the younger generation is pretty good at getting away with stuff like this. I know how we work.”
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Car collides with trailer rig in Texas, killing 5
GEORGE WEST, Texas (AP) _ A car collided with a tractor-trailer rig hauling fuel oil on Interstate 37 in South Texas, killing five members of an extended family, authorities said.
San Patricio County Sheriff Leroy Moody said the five victims all were in the car, which caught fire after veering into another lane and colliding with the tanker. The tanker truck did not catch fire and the driver was not injured.
Department of Public Safety Sr. Trooper Gerald Lee Bryant identified the dead as driver Cynthia Perez, 32; Robert Perez Jr., 38; Robert Perez Sr., 60; David Perez, 23; Brittany Perez, 12, all of Corpus Christi. Bryant told the Corpus Christi Caller-Times that Robert Perez Sr. and Robert Perez Jr. were father and son and that Brittany Perez was Cynthia Perez’s daughter.
The tanker was hauling a load of fuel oil from the Valero refinery in Three Rivers to the Port of Corpus Christi, about 40 miles southeast of the crash site near the small community of Swinney Switch.
The southbound lanes of I-37 remained closed late Thursday, more than nine hours after the crash.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.