Bad Truck Brakes Blamed for Nevada Amtrak Crash
The National Transportation Safety Board has concluded that a distracted driver in a truck with bad brakes was the probable cause of a fiery collision with an Amtrak passenger train that left six dead in northern Nevada last year.
On a 5-0 vote, the panel also agreed Tuesday that insufficient strength of passenger car walls likely contributed to the number of deaths and more than a dozen injuries after the truck skidded 300 feet into the train on June 24, 2011.
NTSB investigators said the truck driver killed in the crash apparently didn’t notice the train because he was fatigued as a result of inconsistent sleeping patterns, was suffering from ankle pain or possibly could have been checking messages on his cellphone. But the panel decided there wasn’t enough evidence of any of those things to include in the formal probable cause finding issued in Washington.
- Charges Dropped Against ‘Poster Boy’ Contractor Accused of Insurance Fraud
- Lawsuit Claims Meta Can See WhatsApp Chats in Breach of Privacy
- UBS Top Executives to Appear at Senate Hearing on Credit Suisse Nazi Accounts
- Credit Suisse Nazi Probe Reveals Fresh SS Ties, Senator Says
- FM Using AI to Elevate Claims to Deliver More Than Just Cost Savings
- Nationwide Spending $100M on AI to Beef up Claims Efficiency, Customer Experience
- What The Return of California’s ‘Death Discount’ Means for Litigation
- Adjusters Launch ‘CarFax for Insurance Claims’ to Vet Carriers’ Damage Estimates