Train crash injures 42 in Philadelphia

At least 42 people have been injured in a train crash at a station in suburban Philadelphia.

A regional rail train has crashed into a parked train at a suburban Philadelphia terminal, injuring 42 people and the train's operator.

Rail spokeswoman Heather Redfern said none of those hurt in the crash suffered life-threatening injuries.

"Some were considered walking wounded," she said.

An inbound Norristown High Speed train crashed into an unoccupied train at the 69th Street Terminal in Upper Darby early on Tuesday local time.

Redfern said hours later that the train operator had been treated at a hospital and released.

A passenger, Raymond Woodard, told WPVI-TV, that he was riding home from work when the train crashed.

"I heard the train going real fast ... like, super-fast," Woodard said. "And I looked up, and I saw that we're at 69th Street and said, 'Why are we going so fast?' And then we just hit the train. Boom! I fell out of my chair, glass from the window shattered, I hit my head. Everybody was on the floor."

Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority officials are investigating the cause.

Redfern said Norristown trains resumed normal operation but no express trains were running. She said commuters could expect some delays.

In an earlier news briefing, Upper Darby Mayor Nicholas Micozzie said the injured were taken to local hospitals.

One passenger told reporters that the operator of the train was "all banged up" and the scene was bloody.


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Source: AAP


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