Truck driver fatigue cited in California train crash
LOS ANGELES — Acute fatigue and lack of familiarity with the area likely caused the driver of a work truck to turn onto train tracks where the vehicle and its trailer were struck by a Southern California commuter train, killing the engineer and injuring dozens more last year, federal investigators said Monday.
The truck driver had been on duty for nearly 24 hours, including nearly 17 hours travelling from Somerton, Arizona, to a work site in Oxnard, California, according to the National Transportation Safety Board’s final report on the accident.
The 5:44 a.m. crash on Feb. 24, 2015, also injured 32 Metrolink passengers and train crew members.
Earlier this year, Ventura County prosecutors filed a misdemeanour charge of vehicular manslaughter against the truck driver, Jose Alejandro Sanchez-Ramirez, a farm equipment repairman from Yuma, Arizona.

