The Amtrak train that jumped the tracks late Tuesday evening near Philadelphia was likely traveling at 106 miles per hour when it approached a bend in the rail where the limit is 50, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) confirmed on Wednesday. The emergency break appears to have been applied just seconds before the derailment, which killed at least seven people and left around 200 injured. And about 24 hours after the deadly crash, Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter told msnbc’s Rachel Maddow that the search and rescue effort at the scene continues “to be sure as best we can be that we have accounted for everyone who was on that train.”
Nutter told msnbc earlier Wednesday that “unless something really went wrong with the engineer,” identified as Brandon Bostian by NBC News, it appears that what occurred was a “preventable accident.” Nutter added, “We know now what happened but we still don’t know why.”
Bostian has handed over his cell phone to Philadelphia police and gave a blood sample, according to NBC affiliate WCAU. Bostian spoke at least briefly to police Wednesday and is expected to sit for another interview in the future, according to the report. Police said no one has been named as a suspect in the crash.
The train’s high speed is the latest clue in the events leading to the derailment along the busiest rail corridor in the country. Several passengers remained unaccounted for on Wednesday afternoon as authorities worked to find answers from the train’s event data recorder, which was recovered in the wreckage.
NTSB investigator Mike Hiller obtains locomotive event data recorder from #Amtrak accident in Philadelphia. pic.twitter.com/oco86dn3gn
— NTSB (@NTSB) May 13, 2015
The Amtrak Regional 188 traveling to New York City from Washington, D.C., had 238 passengers and five crew members on board when it abruptly careened off the tracks just north of Philadelphia Tuesday evening. The train surged forward with such force that all seven train cars and engine derailed from the tracks, overturning some cars and sending some passengers flying.
According to Robert Sumwalt, an NTSB board member, had an Advanced Civil Speed Enforcement System (or ASCES) — a program which is designed to keep trains below their speed limit — been installed in the area this derailment probably “would not have occurred.”
“To see these cars, huge metal, turned upside down, one basically split in half, most of the cars either upside down, on their side or tilting, the engine completely separated … you know this is a devastating situation,” Mayor Nutter said during a press briefing on Wednesday. “It is incredible that so many people walked away from the scene that night.”
Still by midday, the death toll continued to rise. Among those identified were 20-year-old U.S. Navy midshipman Justin Zemser, the Naval Academy said via Twitter, Abid Gilani, an executive at Wells Fargo, Rachel Jacobs, the CEO of ApprenNet, and Associated Press staff member Jim Gaines, who worked as a video software architect, the news organization confirmed.
RELATED: In Washington, Amtrak’s funding has long been under threat
“This is an unthinkable tragedy. Rachel was a wonderful mother, daughter, sister, wife and friend. She was devoted to her family, her community and the pursuit of social justice. We cannot imagine life without her. We respectfully ask for privacy so that we can begin the process of grieving,” the Jacobs family said in a statement on Wednesday.
Authorities were still trying to account for all people aboard the train and match the passenger manifest with records from the more than 200 people who were treated at area hospitals.
“We have made really good progress in accounting for the majority of individuals but we still have folks who we’d like to hear from,” Philadelphia Director of Emergency Management Sam Phillips said during the briefing.
Nearly all patients admitted into Temple University Hospital sustained rib fractures from being bucked and tossed in the train cars, Dr. Herbert Cushing, chief medical officer said. As many as half of the 23 people remaining in the hospital’s care were expected to be released later in the evening, while at least three more surgeries were scheduled for Thursday, he added. The patients’ age ranged from mid-20s to a man in his 80s, with injured passengers hailing from across the globe, including Spain, Germany and India.
“In general we’re doing much better,” Cushing said. “Most patients’ conditions are either stable or better, so that’s very very good news.”
Investigators with the NTSB arrived at the scene just before dawn to access the track, train signals, potential mechanical issues and human operation. “Our mission is to find out not only what happened but why it happened, so we can keep it from happening again,” Sumwalt told reporters. He said the NTSB’s first priority is to recover “perishable evidence.” Sumwalt also said an interview with the train’s engineer will be conducted later, once he’s had time to convalesce. In the meantime the NTSB will be interviewing passengers while the train cars will be examined in a secure location.
RELATED: ‘Amtrak Joe’ Biden reacts to deadly train disaster
Someone who knows the train’s engineer told msnbc that Bostian is a cheerful guy and a rail buff. Asked whether he sensed any character issues with Bostian, the acquaintance said “not even in the slightest.”
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf arrived at the scene of the wreckage just hours after the train jumped the tracks to survey the damage. He has since ordered American flags to be flown at half-staff throughout the state to honor those who died. Later in the day, Pennsylvania Sens. Bob Casey and Pat Toomey also visited the site and were updated in a full briefing.
House Transportation Committee Chairman Rep. Bud Shuster (R-Pa.) was set to travel to Philadelphia Thursday morning.








