Witness: I saw broken, bloody limbs
A train heading from New
Haven to New York City derailed around 6:10 p.m., hitting the other
train in Bridgeport, Connecticut, Metro-North spokeswoman Marjorie
Anders said. That caused some cars on the second train, which was
destined for New Haven, to likewise leave the tracks.
Gov. Dannel Malloy told
reporters Friday night that five people were "critically injured," one
of whom was in "very critical condition."
Two of the 26 people being treated at Bridgeport Hospital are in critical condition, said spokesman John Cappiello.
Trains collide in Connecticut
Raw: Aerials of Conn. train accident
St. Vincent's Medical
Center, also in Bridgeport, treated 41 patients from the incident,
hospital spokeswoman Lucinda Ames said. One of those was in serious
condition and in intensive care, while the others mostly had minor
injuries like "you might get in a car accident."
By 9:45 p.m., 11 of the 67 who had gone to hospitals had been released.
A passenger in a middle
car of the New York-bound train, Chris Martin, recalled to CNN how his
car went dark after the crash, then someone over the intercom "called
all the doctors up front."
He and others aboard his
"pretty full train" were evacuated, most of them physically fine if
emotionally shaken. But there were signs of injuries outside, as Martin
said he personally saw eight or nine ambulances and a number of wounded
people on stretchers.
Brian Alvarez, who saw the wreckage, described the scene as "pretty graphic."
"I saw this one car and
it was completely destroyed, and they were pulling people out of the
car," Alvarez said. "... They were all bloody."
Power was shut off along
the line and service has been halted -- westbound past Bridgeport,
which is about 60 miles northeast of New York City on the Long Island
Sound, and eastbound beyond South Norwalk -- because of the derailment.
Amtrak also announced
early Friday night that it had suspended all travel between New York and
Boston indefinitely after the crash.
Bridgeport Mayor Bill
Finch said such travel headaches could persist for weeks, because the
two tracks affected by the derailment -- which are both "shot right now"
-- may take weeks to repair. Because of a bridge replacement project,
those two tracks are the only way in and out of New York City by train
from that part of Connecticut.
Workers will need to not
only remove disabled trains, but also remove the tracks, regrade the
rail bed, then lay down the tracks again, according to Finch.
"This is our pipeline to
New York City, and it's going to be shut down for some time," the mayor
said. "And it's going to cost this region a great deal of money,
frankly, not just to repair it but the lost wages and the lost economy."
Officials from the
National Transportation Safety Board will head the investigation into
the crash. Terry Williams, a Washington-based spokesman for that agency,
said a team should be on site by 9 a.m. Saturday.
"We have no reason to believe that it's anything but an accident," Gov. Malloy said
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