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Missouri officials have declared a ‘large fatality event’ after a passenger train traveling from Los Angeles to Chicago hit a dump truck that was blocking a public crossing and completely derailed on Monday.
Three people are dead — including two on the train and one in the dump truck — after the train’s eight cars and its two locomotives came off the tracks, officials with the Missouri State Highway Patrol said.
At least 50 people were injured, the Chariton County Ambulance Service said. At least nine patients were being taken to a University of Missouri Health Care hospital in Columbia, Missouri, about 90 miles away, several of them arriving by helicopter.Â
State Highway Patrol Lt. Eric Brown said at a 5pm press conference there was still an ‘active and ongoing investigation at the scene’ but that all the injured had been transported to area hospitals.
The wreck occurred at 12.42pm CT Monday, when the Southwest Chief Train 4 collided with a truck that was obstructing a public crossing and came off the tracks near Mendon, Missouri, about 100 miles northeast of Kansas City, Amtrak confirmed to DailyMail.com. Â
The collision occurred at the uncontrolled Porch Prairie Avenue gravel road crossing, which has no electronic warning devices or gates, officials said.Â
Amtrak said in a statement that there were 243 passengers and 12 crew members aboard at the time of the crash. State troopers said the total number of people on the train may have been lower, but estimated that it was at least 200.
The federal National Transportation Safety Board is deploying a 14-member ‘go-team’ to the site of the derailment to investigate. NTSB Chair Jennifer L. Homendy will join to serve as the spokesperson on the scene, the agency said.Â
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement that he was ‘saddened by the tragic loss of life and injuries in the Missouri train derailment today,’ adding that Federal Railroad Administration staff would support the investigation.
Shocking photos taken in the immediate aftermath of the train wreck show a female passenger being helped out of a window, while others were seen atop overturned cars.Â
Missouri officials have declared a ‘large fatality event’ after an Amtrak train collided with a dump truck at a public railroad crossing and overturnedÂ
An Amtrak train which derailed after striking a dump truck is seen beyond a corn field Monday, near Mendon, Missouri
The Southwest Chief Train 4, which was traveling from Los Angeles to Chicago, collided with the truck that was obstructing the public crossing and came off the tracks at Mendon in Missouri around 12:42 p.m. CT Monday
A worker looks over the decimated remnants of a dump truck that that was struck by an Amtrak train, causing it to derail
The derailment is seen in an aerial image. The federal National Transportation Safety Board is deploying a 14-member ‘go-team’ to the site of the derailment to investigate
The collision occurred at the uncontrolled Porch Prairie Avenue gravel road crossing, which has no electronic warning devices or gates, officials said
‘We ask Missourians to join us in praying for all those impacted,’ Missouri Governor Mike Parson said on Twitter.Â
‘The investigation is in its preliminary stages and as more information becomes available, we will be releasing it at that time,’ Corporal Justin Dunn, a spokesman for the Missouri State Highway Patrol, told reporters at a press conference.
‘There are multiple injuries and we can confirm there were three fatalities — two on the train and one in the dump truck,’ Dunn said.
Rob Nightengale, one of the train passengers, went live on Facebook shortly after the accident that sent at least eight of the train cars rolling onto their sides.Â
In the video, the train passengers’ world is turned upside down and they are seen trying to prop themselves awkwardly against the side of the toppled over train car, while trying to avoid stepping on glass from the shattered windows. Â
Nightengale spoke to CNN in a phone interview and said that those in the dining car and observation deck had the hardest time getting to safety.
The Amtrak train was traveling from Los Angeles to Chicago when it collided with a dump truck at a public crossing in Mendon, Missouri and derailed from the tracks. Mendon is about 100 miles northeast of Kansas City, Missouri
Survivors of an Amtrak crash in Missouri shared a photo of themselves atop the overturned trainÂ
A broken truck axle was photographed close to the track in the aftermath. It’s still unclear why the truck was in the crossing
One person in the dump truck, presumed to be the driver, was killed in the collision. The truck’s chassis is seen above
A worker inspects the scene of an Amtrak train which derailed after striking a dump truck on Monday
Amtrak said in a statement that there were 243 passengers and 12 crew members aboard at the time of the crash
He said he had been dozing off in his car when the train derailed. ‘I could feel the tracks go back and forth, back and forth, and then it started to go, to tumble on my side of the road,’ he said.
Another passenger tweeted several images of the derailment, then posted that the survivors had taken refuge at a local high school in Mendon, Missouri.Â
‘So thankful for the people here, safely at the Northwestern high school near Mendon,’ Dax McDonald tweeted. ‘This town pulled together to help everyone.’
Passengers on the train included high school students from Pleasant Ridge High School in Easton, Kansas, who were headed to a Future Business Leaders of America conference in Chicago, Superintendent Tim Beying told The Kansas City Star.
The Southwest Chief takes about two days to travel from Los Angeles to Chicago. Mendon, with a population of about 160, is about 84 miles northeast of Kansas City.
Rob Nightengale, one of the train passengers, went live on Facebook, showing the aftermath of the accident as the passengers awkwardly prop themselves against the side of the toppled over train car, and avoid stepping on glass
One passenger tweeted that the survivors (above) took refuge at a local high school in Mendon, Missouri, writing:Â ‘So thankful for the people here, safely at the Northwestern high school near Mendon. This town pulled together to help everyone’
Journalist Nylah Burton, who was on a separate Amtrak train set to depart Albuquerque, says she was informed of the possible deaths and injuries by a staff member who came into her car to announce a delay caused by the incident.Â
She tweeted: ‘An @Amtrak train just derailed in Kansas City (there are likely fatalities but they don’t know all the details) so I’m stuck in Albuquerque tonight because the train can’t go any further.’
A Twitter user called Durand shared the shocking snaps, saying: ‘Oh no.. #Amtrak derailment somewhere in #Missouri.’Â
Amtrak confirmed to DailyMail.com that multiple injuries were reported, but no additional details were released.Â
Amtrak tweeted that the Southwest Chief Train 3, which was scheduled to depart Chicago, has been canceled.Â
Amtrak asks passengers whose travel plans are affected to contact 1-800-USA-RAIL for further assistance.Â
Individuals with questions about their friends and family who were traveling aboard the derailed train should call 1-800-523-9101.
Passengers stand on top of a derailed Amtrak train after it collided with a dump truck at a public crossing in Missouri Monday afternoon
The derailment comes one day after another Amtrak train collided with a car at a crossing in Brentwood, California, on Sunday afternoon, killing three women, and injuring several others.Â
Three women, all over the age of 50, were pronounced dead at the scene in Sunday’s crash, according to The Mercury News.
Authorities say the car pulled into a long rural dirt driveway near the intersection of Orwood Road and Bixler Road around 1pm when the Amtrak train rammed into it.
The car then careened off the road and hit another vehicle.
A child and two men were also hospitalized with serious injuries, and another person suffered from moderate injuries.
In total, a spokeswoman for BNSF Railway told the New York Times there were ‘approximately’ five people injured, though the number remains in dispute.
On Sunday (above), three women were killed and four others were injured in a separate crash when an Amtrak train slammed into a car at around 1pm in Brentwood, California.
Authorities say the car careened off the road following the impact and hit another vehicle in Sunday’s crash (above)
Those who who were seriously wounded were rushed to the John Muir Medical Center after the crash on Sunday afternoon, according to ABC News. One of the adults was airlifted and the child was transported by the ground, the San Francisco Chronicle reports.
The victims were all inside the four-door sedan when it was struck, officials say, and Battalion Chief Craig Auzenne, of the East Contra Costa Fire Protection District, told reporters at the scene that none of the 81 passenger or five crew members on board the train were injured.
In fact, he said, the train came to a stop about a quarter-mile from where the sedan slammed into an SUV.
An investigation into the crash is ongoing.Â
But East Contra Costa Fire Department officials say they’d already been called out to that train crossing twice last year because it does not have a traffic guard.
‘It’s a bad crossing,’ Steve Aubert, a fire marshal said, noting that trains travel at about 80mph on the tracks.
‘It’s just a recipe for disaster unfortunately.’Â
An Amtrak passenger train also derailed in north central Montana in September. Three people were killed.Â
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