(CNN) -- Two passengers on the Metro-North train that derailed in New York have filed a notice of claim against the commuter railroad, an initial step in a lawsuit seeking damages in connection with the accident.
Four people died and 67 others were injured in the crash Sunday.
Denise Williams is a
retired Army colonel and dentist who was on her way to a convention at
the time of the crash. She suffered spine, collarbone and rib fractures
after she was pinned inside an overturned car for about an hour,
according to her attorney Michael Lamonsoff.
Negligence accusations
Lamonsoff said Wednesday
the suit on behalf of Williams will accuse the commuter railroad of
negligence. He said state law requires that negligence claims be filed
against the railroad, not the train engineer who allegedly nodded off as
the train was speeding into a sharp curve.
MTA doesn't comment on pending litigation, according to spokeswoman Marjorie Anders.
"While she was ... pinned
down, there was a guy that, a chef who has cerebral palsy, he sat with
her and prayed with her because they didn't know if she would live or
die and she was praying to live," Lamonsoff said.
"Bottom line is the guy
was going 82 mph in a 30 mph zone," Lamonsoff said. He added that the
railroad has been slow to implement what is known as positive train
control technology, which combines GPS, wireless radio and computers to
monitor trains and stop them from colliding or derailing. In 2008,
Congress ordered rail lines to adopt the technology by December 2015.
"We have GPS on cars,
they should have GPS on the trains, he said. "They have been
stonewalling, they have until 2015, they have asked for extensions, they
haven't started any upgrades."
Edward Russell was among
the seriously injured in Sunday's crash. He will ask for punitive
damages in the amount of $10 million, according to his notice of claim,
which cites "loss of earnings," "inability to work" and "post traumatic
stress" as part of the damage sustained from his injuries.
Russell's attorney, Robert Vilensky, expressed concerns about the infamous deadly track curve in Spuyten Duyvil.
"It seems like there
have been several incidents in the area, I believe there were four in
the past year. There's something that seems to be amiss ... whether
they're not doing enough to ensure safety, (or) not paying enough
attention to it," Vilensky said.
Russell's claim accuses
the MTA, Metro North, City and State of New York of being negligent "in
allowing the train to run at a place where there is a sharp curve in the
terrain, (and) in failing to change the design of the tracks when
another incident had occurred similar to the incident herein several
months previously," among other things.
MTA spokesman Salvatore
Arena said the agency began work to install positive train control on
the Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North Railroad in 2009, budgeting
nearly $600 million for its installation, including $428 million last
month for a system integrator. The cost for full implementation is
estimated at $900 million.
Arena said implementing
it by the 2015 deadline will be difficult because much of the technology
is still under development, untested and unproven on commuter railroads
the size of Metro-North and LIRR.
National Transportation
Safety Board member Earl Weener said Tuesday it's possible that positive
train control could have prevented a derailment involving a high-speed
train, such as the one involved in the Metro-North accident.
Train union kicked out of crash investigation
The NTSB, meanwhile, has booted the rail union from its investigation into the derailment for violating confidentiality rules.
The agency made the
announcement late Tuesday night, hours after a union representative told
CNN the train engineer apparently "was nodding off and caught himself
too late" before the accident.
In its announcement, the NTSB specifically cited those comments as the violation.
Anthony Bottalico, the
union representative, told CNN that engineer William Rockefeller Jr.
recognizes his responsibility in the incident.
"I think most people are leaning towards human error," Bottalico said.
Rockefeller's lawyer,
Jeffrey Chartier, characterized what happened as "highway hypnosis." He
said his client had had a full night's sleep before the crash and had no
disciplinary record.
On Wednesday, Chartier
said his client never blamed the accident on faulty brakes, disputing
earlier statements attributed to Rockefeller.
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