Anonymous ID: 5648a9 Jan. 31, 2018, 9:23 p.m. No.231746   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1762 >>1788 >>1813 >>1878 >>1893 >>1966 >>1970 >>2110

>>230980 (last bread)

>Obviously the train slowed down so must have been warned…

 

I think it was warned.

 

Helicopter surveillance saw the truck and warned the engineer.

 

I'm guessing truck was kitty korner between the crossbucks with the back end (dumpster lift hydraulics boom) facing the oncoming train.

 

Train hits boom, spins truck around and rips body off the cab, leaving the cab at the crossing. Train drags truck body down the tracks until the body rolls off down the embankment.

 

Question is, if truck tried to run crossing, why didn't occupants flee cab when getting stuck, unless train hit the truck just as it was trying to run the crossing.?

 

Have to figure, though, if aerial surveillance sees truck and warns engineer, the truck had to have been there for a while, so why didn't occupants flee?

 

If the truck was there as a plant, the only sense I can make of it is that the occupants were patsies, i.e., they were told they were only going to force the train to stop, on the idea of an antifa protest.

 

I don't think surveillance would see a truck headed towards the crossing and tell the engineer to brake, assuming the truck would stop on the tracks. However, it could be that the access road was closed and any traffic was regarded as a danger.

 

Key is how fast does an amtrak train usually go through there, and how fast was this one going. If this train was slower, then why?

Anonymous ID: 5648a9 Jan. 31, 2018, 9:41 p.m. No.232052   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2097

>>231762

By occupants, I meant those present in the truck cab before the accident.

 

Supposedly three. One in the truck died, last I heard, one critical, another walked away.

 

If the truck was planned to stop on the tracks, why would they wait in the cab?

 

If truck was just trying to run the crossing and got hit, why was the train going so slow, unless that is the speed it always goes at that crossing.

 

There's aerial surveillance, so either helicopter saw truck on tracks and warned engineer, who braked, or truck just was just trying to run crossing at that moment and got hit by a really slow moving train.

 

Key, again, is if engineer was warned and braked (e.g. truck was already stuck on the tracks). If that is the case, why did the persons in the cab stay there?