Updated at 7:45 p.m. ET to reflect the revised death toll.
Six people were killed after a crowded commuter train slammed into a sport utility vehicle on the tracks north of New York City on Tuesday.
The crash caused the SUV to explode in a fireball that set the front of the train ablaze, officials said. About 15 people were hurt, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.
It was the deadliest accident in the history of the Metro-North system, which carries about 285,000 passengers a day.
“You have seven people who started out today to go about their business, and aren’t going to be making it home tonight,” Cuomo told reporters Tuesday night near the scene of the 6:30 p.m. crash in Valhalla, about 30 miles north of Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan. “It’s a painful reminder to all of us how precious life is, and sometimes how random it can be.”
Cuomo gave the revised death toll of six in an interview with NY1, a local cable news channel. Authorities had said on Tuesday that seven people were killed. There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancy.
Five of the dead were on the northbound train, Cuomo said. The driver of the Jeep was also killed. That train typically carries about 650 people when it leaves Grand Central bound for northern suburbs, officials said.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority said the Jeep was stopped on the tracks when a railroad crossing gate came down on top of it. The driver got out, checked the rear of the vehicle, and then she got back in and drove forward and was struck by the train, the agency said.
Cuomo called the scene of devastation “a truly ugly and brutal sight.” The Jeep was pushed 400 feet down the track, and the third rail was torn up and sent through the vehicle and into the first car.
“When you look at the damage done, and the damage by the fire, it’s actually amazing that not more people were hurt on that train,” Cuomo said.
The National Transportation Safety Board dispatched a team of investigators to the crash site. MTA Chairman Tom Prendergast said the train’s event recorder should help to piece together the circumstances surrounding the crash.
Deborah Hersman, the former chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, said that trains such as the ones that crashed generally have devices that record speed, throttle position, braking patterns and bells and whistles.
Investigators will also scour any video footage recorded on the train or at the scene, she said.
“Obviously there’s a lot of people in the vicinity, so we might actually have witnesses,” she told TODAY.
Passengers described a jolt, and then an announcement that the train had struck a vehicle. Some passengers had to break the glass on doors to get out; others used ladders to descend from the stopped train.
Jamie Wallace was sitting in the second car from the front when the train slammed into the Jeep. There were panicked calls for a fire extinguisher farther up the train, he said, but the doors to the first car were jammed shut. They tried to break the glass to reach the first car.









