Los Angeles commuter train hits car, partially derails; 21 hurt

Emergency personnel work at the site of a collision between and Expo Line commuter train and a vehicle near downtown Los Angeles on Saturday, March 28, 2015. Firefighters say nearly two dozen people suffered injuries, mostly minor. (AP Photo/Los Angeles Times, Irfan Khan)
Emergency personnel work at the site of a collision between and Expo Line commuter train and a vehicle near downtown Los Angeles on Saturday, March 28, 2015. Firefighters say nearly two dozen people suffered injuries, mostly minor. (AP Photo/Los Angeles Times, Irfan Khan)

LOS ANGELES -- A commuter train slammed into a car at a crossing in front of the University of Southern California on Saturday, seriously injuring the driver and the train's operator. Nineteen passengers on the train suffered lesser injuries.

The train was heading east toward downtown shortly before 11 a.m. when authorities said it appeared the car's driver didn't see it and tried to make a left turn across the tracks onto a major thoroughfare.

The car, a silver Hyundai, was all but demolished. The first two of the train's four cars slightly derailed, but they remained upright.

"We had to use the Jaws of Life to extricate the driver, and we transported him to a local hospital. He was in extremely critical condition," fire Capt. Daniel Curry said at the scene.

The train's operator was also badly hurt. Neither his name nor that of the car's driver were immediately available.

Nineteen passengers on the train suffered lesser injuries, mainly cuts and bruises. "They were all able to walk off the train," Curry said.

Eight were taken to hospitals, and the others were released.

The cause of the crash was under investigation. But Metrolink supervisor Diljiat Sandhu said it appeared the car's driver was attempting to turn left at a grade crossing and didn't see the approaching train. What was left of the vehicle was still partly wedged onto the tracks Saturday afternoon.

The crash occurred in an area where Metrolink trains travel down the middle of Los Angeles' Exposition Boulevard, with cars traveling east or west on either side.

On the north side of the boulevard is the USC campus, and on the south side is an entrance to Los Angeles' Museum of Natural History. It appeared the driver attempted to cross from a small side street that dead-ends at a campus parking lot, officials said.

Metrolink cars are built so that they can be pulled or pushed from the front or back. Officials said this one was being pulled, with the train operator riding in the front of the front car.

Police shut down several blocks of Exposition Boulevard while Metrolink made plans to remove the damaged train.

Metrolink service through the immediate area was suspended, and Sandhu said the transit agency was providing shuttle buses to get riders around the wreck.

It wasn't immediately clear how soon the section would be reopened.

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