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News / Nation & World

Deadly New Mexico bus crash prompts negligence claims

California trucking company, driver named in lawsuits

By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, Associated Press
Published: September 1, 2018, 12:38am
5 Photos
This photo from video provided by KQRENews13 shows first responders working the scene of a collision between a Greyhound passenger bus and a semi-truck on Interstate 40 near the town of Thoreau, N.M., near the Arizona border, Thursday, Aug. 30, 2018. Multiple people were killed and others were seriously injured. Officers and rescue workers were on scene but did not provide details about how many people were killed or injured, or what caused the crash.
This photo from video provided by KQRENews13 shows first responders working the scene of a collision between a Greyhound passenger bus and a semi-truck on Interstate 40 near the town of Thoreau, N.M., near the Arizona border, Thursday, Aug. 30, 2018. Multiple people were killed and others were seriously injured. Officers and rescue workers were on scene but did not provide details about how many people were killed or injured, or what caused the crash. (KQRENews13 via AP) Photo Gallery

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A California-based trucking company and one of its drivers were accused of negligence Friday in a pair of lawsuits as investigators sorted through the wreckage from a deadly bus crash on a New Mexico highway. Eight people were killed and 25 injured, including three young children.

A Greyhound bus carrying nearly 50 people was headed west Thursday along Interstate 40 when a tractor-trailer going in the opposite direction lost the tread on its left front tire and veered across a median and smashed into the bus, police said.

The front of the bus was mangled, the cab of the semi was flipped and the trailer was on its side as debris was scattered across the highway. Passing motorists stopped to help passengers climb out of the wreckage before authorities arrived.

New Mexico State Police Chief Pete Kassetas called them heroes, saying some pulled ladders from trucks to reach the bus windows.

“For them to stop and get involved is amazing. I commend them,” the chief said. “To get ladders, to get into the bus to get people. Can you imagine?”

Investigators with National Transportation Safety Board have secured the vehicles for inspection and examined the crash scene Friday. They also will be looking at factors such as driver fatigue, training, safety records and the condition of the roadway.

“Unfortunately things of this nature occur and our job is to try to do what we can do to prevent them from happening again in the future,” said lead investigator Pete Kotowski.

The legal complaints filed Friday allege negligence on behalf of the unnamed truck driver and JAG Transportation Inc. They cite data from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration that shows the company reported three crashes in the last 24 months.

Attorney Bryan Williams said there are concerns about proper maintenance and inspection of the truck’s tires.

A woman who answered the phone at the company’s office said no one was available to comment. The plaintiffs are not named but one is from Arizona and the other is from Ohio.

The driver of the semi, a 35 year-old man licensed out of California, sustained non-life-threatening injuries. Authorities did not name him, saying he was not currently facing charges.

Officials at University of New Mexico Hospital in Albuquerque said nine patients remain hospitalized there, including three adults who are in intensive care, one of whom is in critical condition.

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