SFGate: One dead, four injured as trains collide north of Dallas; one survivor severely burned

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Thursday, May 20, 2004 (AP)
One dead, four injured as trains collide north of Dallas; one survivor seve=
rely burned



   (05-20) 05:00 PDT GUNTER, Texas (AP) --
   Transportation officials worked Thursday to determine why two freight
trains collided head-on, killing an engineer and injuring four other crew
members in a fiery wreck that left cars scattered across the tracks.
   A major rail line north of Dallas remained closed. U.S. Department of
Transportation officials were on the scene early Thursday, and National
Transportation Safety Board and railroad officials were also en route to
the rural crash site about 50 miles north of Dallas.
   More than 20 rail cars lay in accordion fashion on the tracks after the
trains collided about 6 p.m. Wednesday.
   At least one of the locomotives burned and flames spread to grass and
other nearby vegetation. The engineer who died, who was on the southbound
train, was found about 50 feet from the wreckage. Names of the dead and
injured were not immediately released.
   One of the injured men suffered severe burns and was taken by medical
helicopter to a Dallas hospital, said Texas Department of Public Safety
Trooper Rebecca Uresti. The other three crew members were taken to Wilson
N. Jones Medical Center in Sherman.
   Joe Faust, a spokesman for Fort Worth-based Burlington Northern Santa Fe
Corp., said both trains belonged to the company.
   Rail cars on one of the trains was empty, while the other was hauling
rocks, the Grayson County sheriff's department said. No one was evacuated,
but a hazardous materials crew was called to clean up spilled diesel fuel.
   The collision is the second this month in Texas. On May 3, two freight
trains collided on a Union Pacific track just south of downtown San
Antonio, injuring three people, derailing some cars and spilling about
5,600 gallons of diesel fuel into the San Antonio River.

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Copyright 2004 AP

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