LOS ANGELES, Sept. 13 (Xinhua) -- The death toll in the Los Angeles train collision rose to 26 late Saturday after U.S. rescuers completed their search for victims in the wreckage of the deadly crash accident that happened Friday.
Officials said it was the worst train crash in Los Angeles since 1956 when about 30 people were killed in an accident.
The crash took place Friday afternoon when a Metrolink commuter train collided head-on with a freight train in the Chatsworth area about 50 km northeast of downtown Los Angeles.
A contracted engineer who was driving the Metrolink train was responsible for the crash, said a spokeswoman of Metrolink, the railway commuter transportation system that covers the Los Angels metropolitan area.
The engineer was supposed to pull off in response to a red light and wait for the other train to go by, but he failed to do that, according to spokeswoman Denise Tyrell, who broke down into tears when making the announcement.
"We are deeply sorry and we are totally at a loss. This is a new situation for Metrolink," said Tyrell. "At this moment we must acknowledge that it was a Metrolink engineer that made the error that caused yesterday's accident."
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said the death toll might go higher if people succumb to their injuries at hospitals across the region. Among the 135 injured, 47 were still listed as in critical conditions.
According to local media, a teacher died Saturday afternoon in a hospital after getting injured in the collision.
U.S. federal safety investigators said Saturday that they had recovered two data recorders from the Metrolink train, and a data and video recorder from the freight locomotive, and are analyzing the data to see why the commuter train engineer apparently blew a stop signal.
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger toured the crash scene at noon, and reassured the public that train was a statistically safer way to travel when compared with autos.
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 13 (Xinhua) -- The death toll of Los Angelestrain collision rose to 18 overnight and more bodies are expected to be found as rescue workers pick through the wreckage of Friday's accident, officials said Saturday.
A Metrolink commuter train collided with a freight train in the Chatsworth area, about 50 kilometers northeast of downtown Los Angeles, Friday afternoon, in the deadliest accident in the 12-year history of the region's railway public transportation system.