Amtrak Engineer Ordered to Stand Trial in Philadelphia Crash
Amtrak engineer Brandon Bostian sat stunned as a judge reinstated twice-rejected criminal charges and ordered him to stand trial for a deadly 2015 train wreck in Philadelphia.
Judge Kathryn S. Lewis ruled that another judge erred in dismissing the reckless endangerment and involuntary manslaughter charges at a hearing in September.
Lewis said evidence at the hearing – including testimony from an injured passenger and gruesome details of tattered cars and strewn limbs – should have been sufficient to warrant a trial.
Eight people were killed and about 200 were hurt when the Washington-to-New York train rounded a curve at more than twice the 50 mph speed limit and hurdled off the tracks. National Transportation Safety Board investigators concluded Bostian lost his bearings while distracted by radio chatter about an incident with a nearby train. They found no evidence Bostian was impaired or using a cellphone.
Bostian remains free on bail but must give up his passport and call court officials weekly. He opted not to attend his Feb. 21 arraignment. Bostian’s lawyers declined to comment on the ruling. They’ve argued before that his speeding was a momentary lapse from an otherwise safety-conscious engineer.
Bostian has been on unpaid leave from Amtrak since the crash. He is suing the government-owned railroad, alleging he was left disoriented or unconscious when something struck his train before it derailed. NTSB investigators have said nothing struck the locomotive.
Amtrak has taken responsibility for the crash and agreed to pay $265 million to settle civil claims filed by victims and their families. The railroad also has installed positive-train control technology that can automatically slow or stop a speeding train on its track from Boston to Washington. The technology wasn’t in place when Bostian’s train crashed and is still missing on third-party tracks Amtrak uses in other parts of the country.
Pennsylvania’s attorney general picked up the criminal case against Bostian last May, as a statute of limitations loomed.