Conductor of Metrolink Train Says Signal Was Green Just Before Train Accident
Friday, December 5th, 2008More revelations in the Los Angeles Metrolink train accident are being made every day. Just a couple of days ago, we reported on our Metrolink train crash lawyers blog that the red light that engineer Robert Sanchez was alleged to have run was poor in visibility. Now, the Los Angeles Times is reporting that a conductor on the train has told investigators that the light was not red at all, but green.
This corresponds to the observations of witnesses, including a few rail fans, that the signal light that the train passed just before it crashed head-on into a Union Pacific freight train was not red at all, but green. However, this had been refuted by Metrolink, which insisted that there was nothing wrong with its light system, and pinpointed the blame on Sanchez.
Sanchez’s failure to stop at the red light has been the subject of much scrutiny. It has been tied to his texting messages on his cell phone to a rail fan on the journey of Train 111. Initially, that was believed to have been the reason why the engineer missed a red light. Investigators had also been focusing their probe on the failure to follow train signal announcement protocol. Rules require engineers and conductors to call out the red signals as they see them, so one person is always in a position to stop the train even if the engineer does not. On board Train 111, no such calls were recorded, and now, with this new allegation that the signal light was not red, but green, we might finally have an answer to why Sanchez failed to stop at the signal.
It’s not just Metrolink that insists that its signal system was functioning properly, and that there was no way there could have been a green light just before the train crash. The NTSB too in its preliminary findings, maintained that the signal light had been red, and Sanchez had failed to spot it or had failed to stop for whatever reason. The NTSB maintains that the signal system had been tested by investigators soon after the accident, and had been found to be functioning properly.
As the investigations into one of California’s worst rail disasters continue, things seem to be getting more and more tangled. It will be a while before investigations wrap up, and we get a complete picture of what really transpired aboard the train in those fateful seconds before the accident. If what the conductor says about the signal light is true, then for Sanchez’s family which has been battling with allegations that his negligence was responsible for the 25 deaths that occurred in the train crash, it will be a huge vindication of his innocence. It will prove that he was not at fault at all.
Metrolink has seemed to be in too much of a hurry to pin the blame for the train accident on Sanchez. The accident has attracted attention from dozens of Metrolink train accident lawyers, and the agency no doubt, wants to keep its culpability to the absolute minimum.
The Reeves Law Group is a law firm with offices throughout California dedicated exclusively to the representation of personal injury victims, including victims of train accidents. Please visit our website at trlglaw.com. If you desire a free consultation on a personal injury matter, please call us at (800) 644-8000 or email us.