Tag: train accident
Georgia Grand Jury Indicts Allman Film Producers In Sarah Jones’ Death

Georgia Grand Jury Indicts Allman Film Producers In Sarah Jones’ Death

By Meg James, Los Angeles Times

The producers of a Gregg Allman biopic has been indicted in the train crash that killed a film crew member.

A Georgia grand jury has indicted film producers Randall Miller, Jody Savin, and Jay Sedrish on charges of involuntary manslaughter and criminal trespass in connection with the February death of camera assistant Sarah Jones.

Jackie L. Johnson, district attorney for Georgia’s Brunswick Judicial Circuit, which includes Wayne County where the accident occurred, announced the indictments on Thursday.

Involuntary manslaughter carries a potential prison sentence of 10 years, according to Georgia law. Criminal trespass is a misdemeanor and carries a year’s jail sentence.

The death of Jones, 27, galvanized film crew members throughout the entertainment industry, highlighting longstanding concerns about worker safety. Last year, in a separate accident, three people died during a shoot for a Discovery Channel show when a helicopter crashed in Acton, Calif.

On Feb. 20, crew members were working on the film Midnight Rider, about the life of rock singer Gregg Allman. They were instructed to walk out on an old railroad trestle high above Georgia’s Altamaha River, where they placed a metal-frame bed on the tracks for an action scene.

William Hurt was scheduled to play Allman in the film.

As the crew prepared for a dream-sequence scene, a train came barreling toward them.

Crew members tried to pull the bed off the train tracks but were unable to. The train hit the bed frame and Jones, killing her.

In Thursday’s announcement the district attorney’s office said that Miller and Savin were the owners of Unclaimed Freight Productions Inc., which was filming Midnight Rider. Miller was also director of the film.

Sedrish was an executive producer.

Several other crew members were injured in the accident on the railroad tracks and trestle, located in Doctortown Landing.

The film’s production was suspended after the accident. Hurt withdrew from the production after Jones’ death.

The film’s producers did not have permission to film on the railway trestle itself, which is owned by the railroad company CSX.

The Wayne County sheriff’s office investigated the case. The district attorney presented the case to the grand jury on Wednesday.

A spokeswoman for the district attorney’s office said there would be no further comment because the case is pending.

Los Angeles Times staff writer Richard Verrier contributed to this report.

Photo: Michael Hicks via Flickr

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More Than 30 Hurt When Train Jumps Platform At O’Hare Airport

More Than 30 Hurt When Train Jumps Platform At O’Hare Airport

By Peter Nickeas, Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — More than 30 people were injured Monday morning when a Chicago Transit Authority train jumped the platform and climbed up an escalator at the end of the Blue Line at O’Hare International Airport, officials said.

“I heard a boom and when I got off the train, the train was all the way up the escalator. It’s a wreck,” Denise Adams, who was riding toward the back of the train, told reporters. “It was a lot of panic because it was hard to get people off the train.”

Fire crews scrambled to determine if anyone was underneath the train but no one was found, according to Chicago Fire Commissioner Joe Santiago. All of the injured were aboard the train and were taken in fair or good condition to four hospitals, he said. The operator of the train “was walking and talking as we were investigating,” Santiago said.

The eight-car train was wedged near the top of an escalator used by commuters at the Blue Line terminal. CTA spokesman Brian Steele said workers may have to cut up the car and remove it piece by piece, which could take 12 to 24 hours. Then the damage will have to be assessed and repairs made before trains use the station, he said.

In the meantime, shuttle buses will be used between Rosemont, Illinois, and O’Hare.

Steele said the cause of the accident remained underO'Hare airport investigation. “We don’t know yet what led to this incident … We will be looking at everything _ equipment, signals, the human factor, any extenuating circumstances,” he said.

Steele did say the train was “apparently traveling at a higher rate of speed than a train would be” while pulling into the station and officials are trying to determine why. He said the National Transportation Safety Board was also investigating.

The accident happened around 2:50 a.m. “There is a stop down there for each track. There’s three tracks there. The train actually climbed over the last stop, jumped up the sidewalk and went up the escalator,” Santiago said.

More than 50 firefighters and paramedics responded, he said. “We did not know if there was anyone underneath the train … so we brought in our specialized units to check underneath there … They made a visual to make sure no one was underneath.”

Six people were listed in fair-to-serious condition and 26 in good-to-fair condition, fire officials on the scene said. Nine were transported to Resurrection Hospital, eight each went to Our Lady of the Resurrection Medical Center and Swedish Covenant Hospital, and seven went to Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge. All of the injured were passengers on the train, officials said.

Robert Kelly, president of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 308, which represents more than 3,500 CTA workers, said the operator suffered minor injuries to her leg.

The operator will undergo drug and alcohol tests as part of standard procedure, Steele said.

Initial inspections indicate that the front two cars of the train were damaged as well as the escalator, officials said.

“Once we remove the train, we’ll have a much clearer picture of what the issues are there,” said Chris Bushell, chief infrastructure officer for the CTA. “At this moment, it looks like we have significant damage to one escalator.”

While there was some structural damage to the platform as well, “the stairs look solid and the majority of the rest of the structure underneath looks solid.”

Steele said the accident occurred during one of the lowest traffic times at the station.

Photo: Michael Kappel via Flickr

At Least 10 Injured After Boston Subway Train Derails

At Least 10 Injured After Boston Subway Train Derails

By Matt Pearce, Los Angeles Times

At least 10 people were hospitalized Monday after a Boston subway car derailed underground and another car braked quickly to avoid a collision, officials said.

Only one person had serious injuries, according to a statement from Boston Emergency Medical Services.

A Green Line Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority train appeared to have come off its rails and crashed into a wall where a pair of tracks crossed underground, according to photos posted to emergency officials’ Twitter accounts.

“Injuries were some people from derailed trolley and some from a 2nd trolley that hit brakes hard to avoid derailed trolley,” the Boston Fire Department said in a tweet.

The cause of the incident was under investigation, and trains in the area were canceled for the rest of the day.

Photo: ZeHawk via Flickr