NewsNational News

Actions

New Jersey double bus crash leaves driver dead, 19 hurt

Posted at 12:36 PM, Aug 19, 2016
and last updated 2016-08-19 12:36:50-04

One person is dead and 18 others injured after a commuter bus t-boned another bus in Newark, New Jersey, Friday, authorities said.

Shortly after leaving Irvington Terminal, the bus was headed up Broad Street near Military Park when it was t-boned by the No. 59 bus headed westbound, leaving the driver of the No. 59 bus dead and more than a dozen passengers injured, according to NJ Transit officials.

The fatal crash, which happened shortly after 6 a.m., resulted in 18 injuries, including most of the passengers aboard the No. 13 bus, NJ Transit spokeswoman Nancy Snyder said. She added that seven of those commuters were in critical condition.

NJ Transit officials, along with local police and emergency responders, were among the first to arrive at the crash site, where they found the No. 13 bus overturned and nearly split in half. Emergency responders removed the passengers from the wreckage one by one, strapping some onto gurneys before transporting them to several local hospitals.

They were joined by employees from the nearby Starbucks, who, after seeing the crash, rushed out with first aid kits, water and ice packs for the wounded, according to CNN affiliate WPIX.

Shortly after the wreck, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka arrived at the crash site to speak with investigators. After surveying the scene, he told reporters that one of the drivers might have run a red light. However, officials said, both the Essex County prosecutor's office and Newark Police Department would continue to investigate what led to the fatal wreck.

"We're praying for all of those in the hospital," Baraka said at a news conference.

Christopher Trucillo, police chief of NJ Transit, expressed his condolences to the family of the decreased driver of the No. 59 bus, a longtime employee of the agency.

"Our hearts and sympathies go out," Trucillo said, "not only to his family, but to all our bus employees."

Officials said the driver's name would not be released until the family had been properly notified.