Parade honoring war heroes ends in horrific crash
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MIDLAND, Texas (AP) - Cheered on by a flag-waving crowd, a parade float filled with wounded veterans and their spouses was inching across a railroad track when the crossing gates began to lower and a freight train that seemed to come out of nowhere was suddenly bearing down on them, its horn blaring.
Some of those seated on the float jumped off in wide-eyed terror just moments before the train crashed into the flatbed truck with a low whoosh and a thunderous crack.
Four veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan - including an Army sergeant who apparently sacrificed his life to save his wife - were killed Thursday afternoon and 16 people were injured in a scene of both tragedy and heroism.
For some of the veterans who managed to jump clear of the wreck, training and battlefield instinct instantly kicked in, and they rushed to help the injured, applying tourniquets and putting pressure on wounds.
"They are trained for tragedy," said Pam Shoemaker of Monroe, La., who was with her husband, a special operations veteran, on a float ahead of the one that was hit.
A day after the crash, federal investigators were trying to determine how fast the train was going and whether the two-float parade had been given enough warning to clear the tracks.
And locals were struggling to cope with a tragedy at the start of what was supposed to be a three-day weekend of banquets, deer hunting and shopping in appreciation of the veterans' sacrifice.
"It's just a very tragic and sad thing," said Michael McKinney of Show of Support, the local charity that organizes the annual event and invited the two dozen veterans. "It's difficult when you're trying to do something really good and something tragic occurs."
National Transportation Safety Board member Mark Rosekind, standing near the intersection in downtown Midland where the crash took place, offered hope Friday that video would provide a fuller picture of what happened. Cameras were on both the lead car of the Union Pacific train and a sheriff's vehicle that was trailing the flatbed truck, Rosekind said.
Killed were Marine Chief Warrant Officer 3 Gary Stouffer, 37; Army Sgt. Maj. Lawrence Boivin, 47; Army Sgt. Joshua Michael, 34; and Army Sgt. Maj. William Lubbers, 43. One veteran and three spouses remained hospitalized Friday, with one spouse in critical condition.
At the time of the crash, the veterans were on their way to a banquet in their honor.
Shoemaker said the flatbed truck she was riding on had just crossed the tracks and was moving slowly when she heard a train coming and looked back to see the lowered crossing gates bouncing up and down on the people seated on the float behind her.
Witnesses described people screaming as the warning bells at the crossing went off and the train blasted its horn.
Daniel Quinonez, who was waiting in his vehicle as the parade went by, said the float on the tracks could not go anywhere because of the one right in front of it.
"It was a horrible accident to watch happen right in front of me," he said. "I just saw the people on the semi-truck's trailer panic, and many started to jump off the trailer. But it was too late for many of them."
Another witness, Joe Cobarobio, said only a few seconds elapsed between the time the crossing gates came down and the train slammed into the flatbed truck with a "giant cracking sound."
Michael, one of the soldiers killed, pushed his wife off the float when he saw the train coming, his wife told Cory Rogers, a friend of the couple.
"His first instinct was to get her out of harm's way," said Rogers, who was not at the parade. "That's the kind of man he was, and I feel like it was his training as a paramedic and then as a soldier, choosing to put someone's life before your own."
Federal Railroad Administration records reviewed by The Associated Press show there were 10 collisions at the crossing between 1979 and 1997. But no accidents had happened in the past 15 years, the NTSB's Rosekind said.
Six drivers were injured in those accidents. The trains involved were moving slowly at the time, between 15 and 25 mph.
Union Pacific spokeswoman Raquel Espinoza said the top speed on that track was raised in 2006 from 40 mph to 70 mph. It was not immediately clear if that speed applied to the crossing.
A key question for investigators is whether, after the speed limit was raised, the timing of the crossing gates was changed to give cars and trucks enough time to clear the tracks, Robert Chipkevich, who headed NTSB's rail investigations unit until retiring in 2010, said in an interview.
Investigators will also look at whether traffic lights in town prevented the flatbed truck in front from moving ahead, he said.
Sudip Bose, who was a front-line physician in Iraq, said the aftermath reminded him of a combat triage situation. Veterans instantly tended to the injured, and bystanders helped, too. Shoemaker's husband, Tommy, resuscitated one person and applied a tourniquet to a bleeding woman.
"Instincts kicked in," said Bose, who served in Fallujah and Baghdad and was volunteering at the parade.
Some of those seated on the float jumped off in wide-eyed terror just moments before the train crashed into the flatbed truck with a low whoosh and a thunderous crack.
Four veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan - including an Army sergeant who apparently sacrificed his life to save his wife - were killed Thursday afternoon and 16 people were injured in a scene of both tragedy and heroism.
For some of the veterans who managed to jump clear of the wreck, training and battlefield instinct instantly kicked in, and they rushed to help the injured, applying tourniquets and putting pressure on wounds.
"They are trained for tragedy," said Pam Shoemaker of Monroe, La., who was with her husband, a special operations veteran, on a float ahead of the one that was hit.
A day after the crash, federal investigators were trying to determine how fast the train was going and whether the two-float parade had been given enough warning to clear the tracks.
And locals were struggling to cope with a tragedy at the start of what was supposed to be a three-day weekend of banquets, deer hunting and shopping in appreciation of the veterans' sacrifice.
"It's just a very tragic and sad thing," said Michael McKinney of Show of Support, the local charity that organizes the annual event and invited the two dozen veterans. "It's difficult when you're trying to do something really good and something tragic occurs."
National Transportation Safety Board member Mark Rosekind, standing near the intersection in downtown Midland where the crash took place, offered hope Friday that video would provide a fuller picture of what happened. Cameras were on both the lead car of the Union Pacific train and a sheriff's vehicle that was trailing the flatbed truck, Rosekind said.
Killed were Marine Chief Warrant Officer 3 Gary Stouffer, 37; Army Sgt. Maj. Lawrence Boivin, 47; Army Sgt. Joshua Michael, 34; and Army Sgt. Maj. William Lubbers, 43. One veteran and three spouses remained hospitalized Friday, with one spouse in critical condition.
At the time of the crash, the veterans were on their way to a banquet in their honor.
Shoemaker said the flatbed truck she was riding on had just crossed the tracks and was moving slowly when she heard a train coming and looked back to see the lowered crossing gates bouncing up and down on the people seated on the float behind her.
Witnesses described people screaming as the warning bells at the crossing went off and the train blasted its horn.
Daniel Quinonez, who was waiting in his vehicle as the parade went by, said the float on the tracks could not go anywhere because of the one right in front of it.
"It was a horrible accident to watch happen right in front of me," he said. "I just saw the people on the semi-truck's trailer panic, and many started to jump off the trailer. But it was too late for many of them."
Another witness, Joe Cobarobio, said only a few seconds elapsed between the time the crossing gates came down and the train slammed into the flatbed truck with a "giant cracking sound."
Michael, one of the soldiers killed, pushed his wife off the float when he saw the train coming, his wife told Cory Rogers, a friend of the couple.
"His first instinct was to get her out of harm's way," said Rogers, who was not at the parade. "That's the kind of man he was, and I feel like it was his training as a paramedic and then as a soldier, choosing to put someone's life before your own."
Federal Railroad Administration records reviewed by The Associated Press show there were 10 collisions at the crossing between 1979 and 1997. But no accidents had happened in the past 15 years, the NTSB's Rosekind said.
Six drivers were injured in those accidents. The trains involved were moving slowly at the time, between 15 and 25 mph.
Union Pacific spokeswoman Raquel Espinoza said the top speed on that track was raised in 2006 from 40 mph to 70 mph. It was not immediately clear if that speed applied to the crossing.
A key question for investigators is whether, after the speed limit was raised, the timing of the crossing gates was changed to give cars and trucks enough time to clear the tracks, Robert Chipkevich, who headed NTSB's rail investigations unit until retiring in 2010, said in an interview.
Investigators will also look at whether traffic lights in town prevented the flatbed truck in front from moving ahead, he said.
Sudip Bose, who was a front-line physician in Iraq, said the aftermath reminded him of a combat triage situation. Veterans instantly tended to the injured, and bystanders helped, too. Shoemaker's husband, Tommy, resuscitated one person and applied a tourniquet to a bleeding woman.
"Instincts kicked in," said Bose, who served in Fallujah and Baghdad and was volunteering at the parade.
Wow - very sad. Â And all fairly young guys too. Â Just tragic.
This is where it happened: http://goo.gl/maps/QHpjm
Flat land, and straight tracks for a long ways in both directions. Something doesn't seem right about this.
yes, very strange incident.
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tragic either way you slice it though...
When I lived in Utah, I was on a planning committee for a small parade. At one point on our route we had to cross train tracks. One of our committee members was assigned to contacting the train lines about our parade to see if there were any planned crossings during our parade time. Then we still had two people assigned as "watchers" (one facing one way down the tracks and the other facing the other way down the tracks) to ensure safe crossing. Trains might move slow through residential areas but they are still nothing to mess with. I'm so sad to hear that some great men that served our country are no longer with us due to this horrible and seemingly preventable accident. May their families find peace.
@Table9  When the investigation is concluded and an official explanation is given, peace for the families will be possible.Â
How horrific! What stuck out to me was that there was no warning at all. The lady said they didn't see it or hear it until it was upon them. If those on the float would have seen or at least heard the train they could have bailed in time.
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I don't know about there but I've lived nearby train tracks. Trains don't just sneak up on you. In fact, when I live in Puyallup, we heard the horn blow for every single train all through town. This is just a wild guess but was the train crew even paying attention to the tracks ahead of them? The Union Pacific spokesman said he did not know if the train crew saw the float. How could you miss a float that is full of people and stopped on the tracks??
 @Tattooed_Angel If the tracks curved around a lot in that area, like they do around the shorelines here, both train operator, and obstacle on the tracks may not see each other until it's too late.
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As to hearing, surely crowd noise (the woman said everyone was cheering and the children yelling "thank you" to the veterans)made it harder to hear the train approaching, the curves on the tracks could add to the sound barrier, and also, many cities are fighting for "quiet zones," where the train operators are not allowed to sound the horns unless they see someone on the tracks.Â
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Condolences to all involved in, or affected by this tragedy.Â
@Tattooed_Angel There was a lot of noise going on, they might not have heard the horn. You don't know if there might have been a bend in the tracks, limitting the view the crew had prior to the accident, also. There's a lot of questions.
Train crews pay attention to the tracks ahead of them. They are very aware of what happens when a train and auto collide, or pedestrian. It's a nightmare for all of them, one of their biggest fears.Â
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How tragic!!! What could have happened?? Maybe simply distracted and following the flat bed ahead!! Tunnel vision for the moment such as this!! When it's your time, make no mistake about it....Things like this just might happen!! No explination of it!!
from the Texas truck driver CDL handbook
Crossing the Tracks
Railroad crossings with steep approaches can cause your
unit to hang up on the tracks.
Never permit traffic conditions to trap you in a position where
you have to stop on the tracks. Be sure you can get all the
way across the tracks before you start across.
Do not shift gears while crossing railroad tracks.
 @concernedMidlander That has always been my attitude toward train tracks of any sort, no matter what size vehicle I'm driving, and I just don't -care- if it ticks someone else off.
I read else where that the float was waiting behind some other people (floats) Â and couldn't go forwards or backwards . Very sad!!
Its not hard to avoid a train, especially when there is a gate and flashing lights.Â
When the gates are down and or the lights are flashing you don't park on the tracks to light a cigarette or text your girlfriend. If anyone was at fault was the float driver. At 25 mph it takes some of those trains a mile to stop. Sure you want to stick your car on the track in front of one?????
Time for the NTSB to do its job and slow these trains down through residential areas. We have the same problem right here where they have increased the speeds of the trains. Just asking for on big catastrophe. Governments job is to help protect the public, not to help businesses get rich. Slow them down and make them as safe as we can reasonably. They will never be completely safe of course.
 @Blindman Time for liberals to move back to Canada. This is the land of
PERSONAL ACCOUNTABILITY.! ! NEWS FLASH ! ! Toilet seats and lids found dangerous to young males, Barrack Obama immediately bans all toilet seats and lids.
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!! NEWS FLASH !! Going outside could be dangerous to your health, as well as staying inside, Barrack Obama bans all citizens from leaving their beds.
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!! NEWS FLASH !! Unattended Hospitals receiving record number of voice mail concerning bed soars.This "Government, please hold my hand" crap is all about losers who can't do anything on their own.
 @William H. Bonney  @Blindman Billie Boner is an idiot. Yeah, that be you homeboy. Based on your spelling, I'm guessing you live in AZ or TX.
 @William H. Bonney  @Blindman Losers who can't even spell the President's name after he's in office four years, who can't spell sore or voicemail, or use punctuation any elementary school student knows, who capitalize the word hospital in mid-sentence?Â
What exactly is an unattended hospital, anyway?Â
 @Blindman slowing down a train that is several hundred tons wont diminish the damage they do, nor will it help them stop any sooner. Can't stop if you can't see what your supposed to stop for. No, its better to speed them up, and put better education about train crossings. Stupid will always happen, there is nothing we can do to stop it. We can mitigate it with education and training.
 @Blindman , if trains are slowed down that'll mean trains taking even longer to get over a public crossing creating an inconvenience to the public meaning they will take greater risks to cross tracks if a train is approaching including going around gates. It will also mean a greater public safety risk by causing the trains to occupy the crossing longer meaning emergency access by first responders could be delayed by making trains safer. I do not think the RR was at fault in this accident, I think it was with the driver and the parade organizers. The driver should not have driven his truck/float onto the tracks until he was sure his rig could completely cross the tracks.
"he didn't know if the train crew saw the float approaching"
You really gotta watch out for those high-speed floats, they come up on trains pretty damn fast.
Perhaps the organizers of the parade should have contacted UP and arranged for that section of track to be put out of service for the duration of the parade. Perhaps the parade should not have crossed railroad tracks. Perhaps the parade participants believed that the railroad know there was a parade and had stopped trains. Although my thoughts and prayers are for and with the families of those killed and injured, they are also with the train crew, who could see this was about to happen and could do absolutely NOTHING about it! Railroad Crossing: STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! and LIVE!!!
 @EMDF9A perhaps the driver should have stopped his vehicle before entering a live crossing. Â
What happened? Did the float get stuck on the rails?
 @cm257n7 Most likely, there was a parade traffic jam and this float stopped on the tracks, knew a train was coming but could not move back or forward. The disabled vets could not easily get out the way, and even if they could, they may have assumed the train was going to stop. Even a slow moving train will take thousands of feet to come to a full stop. By the time they realized the danger, it was too late.