Hopes were dashed Friday that the engineer operating Amtrak Regional 188 could shed light on what led the train to derail as it sped wildly into a curve earlier this week. “He did not feel fatigued nor did he report any illness” — and he also did not have memory of the moments immediately before the crash, according to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), which interviewed the 32-year-old engineer, Brandon Bostian. He was extremely cooperative with his lawyer on hand, NTSB spokesman Robert Sumwalt said during a press briefing Friday.
The NTSB also requested that the FBI examine particular damage to the train’s windshield based on a report that something may have struck the train. An interview with a deputy conductor revealed that she overheard a Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) engineer telling Bostian that something might have hit the nearby SEPTA train — either an object or, possibly, a gunshot. The incident led the SETPA engineer to place his train in an emergency stop, according to the deputy conductor’s account. The NTSB has since obtained and will examine the image recorder from that train.
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“Of course when the [Amtrak] engine went through the impact, the windshield was shattered but there is particular damage there that we want [the FBI] to look at,” Sumwalt added Friday. NTSB officials also interviewed a second deputy conductor, but not the lead conductor, who was still recovering in the hospital.
Officials investigating Tuesday night’s deadly Amtrak crash in Philadelphia have obtained a search warrant for the cell phone records of Bostian, who was at the controls when the commuter train derailed, leaving eight people dead and more than 200 injured. Data recovered from the wreckage shows the train accelerated to over 100 mph in the minute before the crash as it approached a curve where the speed limit was just 50 mph.
Analyzing Bostian’s cell phone records could help determine why Amtrak Northeast Regional Train 188 jumped the tracks, and if he was distracted while operating the train.
As the investigation enters its fourth day, officials say they believe that all 243 people on board — 238 passengers and five crew members — have been accounted for. Forty-three patients were still being treated at area hospitals, according to the latest numbers. Temple University Hospital said on Friday that 12 patients remain at its facility with five in critical condition.
The eighth victim was extricated by hydraulic tools early Thursday morning after the city’s fire department was asked to bring cadaver-searching dogs to the scene.
Robert Goggin, an attorney for the engineer, said Bostian suffered a concussion and does not remember the crash. “He remembers driving the train, he remembers going to that area generally, has absolutely no recollection of the incident or anything unusual,” said Goggin, who has insisted his client’s cell phone was off during the trip, which started in Washington D.C. and was headed to New York.
Goggin added that the next thing Bostian recalled was being thrown around and eventually finding his cell phone to call police. Bostian, who had 14 staples placed in his head and injured his knee as a result of the derailment, has voluntarily turned over a blood sample, according to his attorney.
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