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Six Dead, Scores Injured in Philadelphia Train Derailment

Officials survey the site of a derailed Amtrak train in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Officials survey the site of a derailed Amtrak train in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania / Reuters
May 13, 2015

By Daniel Kelley

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - Rescue workers searched through the debris on Wednesday for more victims of an Amtrak passenger train wreck in Philadelphia that killed six people and injured scores others as investigators sought to determine the cause of the derailment.

Authorities said they did not know what caused the New York City-bound train carrying 243 people to derail at about 9:30 p.m. EDT Tuesday (0130 GMT Wednesday). The accident left rail cars mangled, ripped open and strewn upside down in the city's Port Richmond neighborhood along the Delaware River.

Survivors described passengers and luggage being tossed about as train carriages careened. Philadelphia-area hospitals and health systems reported treating about 135 people from the wreck.

"It's an absolute disastrous mess," Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter said. "I've never seen anything like this in my life."

Amtrak said there were 238 passengers and five crew members on the No. 188 train on route from Washington, D.C., to New York. Seven cars, including the engine, left the tracks, according to the mayor.

Nutter said authorities had not yet accounted for everyone aboard the train.

The publicly funded national passenger rail line provided no other details about the accident. It said Amtrak service along its busy Northeast corridor between New York and Philadelphia was suspended.

Nutter said he doubted the service would be restored through Philadelphia this week.

CNN quoted the Federal Bureau of Investigation as saying there was no indication that terrorism was a factor in the derailment. Three law enforcement officials contacted by Reuters also said they had not encountered anything suspicious.

"We do not know what happened here. We do not know why this happened," Nutter told reporters. He later told CNN there was no indication there had been a collision with another train.

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said a "go-team" that would investigate the crash was expected to arrive on Wednesday morning.

"ALL OF A SUDDEN ... OFF THE RAILS"

Former Pennsylvania Congressman Patrick Murphy, who was a passenger on the train, told MSNBC the cafe car he was riding in flipped over, but he escaped with minor cuts and bruises.

He estimated the train was traveling at about 60 to 70 miles per hour (96-113 kph) when "all of a sudden, it went off the rails."

U.S. Senator Tom Carper of Delaware had been on the train but got off at Wilmington, Delaware, before the crash, he said in a Twitter message.

Passenger Daniel Wetrin told CNN by phone that he was riding in the last car when it left the tracks and he was thrown into the aisle.

"Chairs were flying around, people were flying, bags, pretty chaotic," he said. "There were two people above our heads in the luggage rack."

Moments later, people managed to open a rear door and walk off, he said, adding he was unaware of any major injuries.

Port Richmond is a working-class neighborhood that has recently become a popular place to live among younger adults in the city.

Sharon Achuff, 51, who lives along the tracks about 200 yards (183 meters) from the wreck, said she was sitting on her front stoop when she saw a bright, flashing blue light, followed by a loud boom.

In a video posted on social media, passengers could be heard crying while others told victims to crawl forward.

The crash was the latest in a series of rail accidents on heavily traveled passenger train routes over the past year.

In March, 21 people were injured in Los Angeles when a commuter train collided with a car. A month earlier, 50 people were hurt and an engineer fatally injured when a Los Angeles-bound Metrolink train struck a pickup truck.

In February, six people were killed and a dozen injured when a Metro North commuter train north of New York City hit a car stalled on the tracks. The driver of the vehicle also died.

(Additional reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst; Writing by Steve Gorman and Curtis Skinner; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)