Palo Verde derailment
LocationPalo Verde, Arizona
DateOctober 9, 1995
TargetAmtrak Sunset Limited
Attack type
Train derailment caused by sabotage
Deaths1
Injured78
PerpetratorsUnknown
MotiveRetaliation of the Waco Siege

The 1995 Palo Verde derailment took place on October 9, 1995, when Amtrak's Sunset Limited was derailed by saboteurs near Palo Verde, Arizona on Southern Pacific Railroad tracks. Two locomotives, Amtrak GE P32-8BWH #511 leading and EMD F40PHR #398 trailing, and eight of twelve cars derailed, four of them falling 30 feet (9 m) off a trestle bridge into a dry river bed.[1] Mitchell Bates, a sleeping car attendant, was killed. Seventy-eight people were injured, 12 of them seriously and 25 were hospitalized.[2]

Incident

The site of the derailment in 2013. The large gouge in the embankment was created by the impact of the train.

Four typewritten notes, attacking the ATF and the FBI for the 1993 Waco Siege, criticizing local law enforcement, and signed "Sons of the Gestapo", were found near the scene of the wreck, indicating that the train had been sabotaged. All four notes were similar. Two of the notes were found by Neal Hallford,[3] a passenger traveling from Oklahoma to San Diego.

It was found that the rails had been shifted out of position to cause the derailment, but only after they had been connected with wires. This kept the track circuit closed, circumventing safety systems designed to warn locomotive engineers of track problems, and suggested that the saboteurs had a working knowledge of railroads. The attack was likened to the 1939 wreck of the City of San Francisco, in which a similar method killed 24 people.[4]

Following the incident, Amtrak President Thomas Downs told CNN that improved monitoring and security measures have greatly reduced the chances of a similar incident.[2]

The saboteurs were never identified.

After 1996, the Sunset Limited was rerouted to south of Phoenix (approaching no closer than Maricopa) due to the desire of Union Pacific to abandon this stretch of track (leading to and through Phoenix, AZ) for its through trains between southern New Mexico and southern California. The section of track on which the derailment took place is now used as storage track only. It could be reactivated in the future if freight traffic increases.

Media coverage

The causes of this wreck have been explored in two major documentaries, Why Trains Crash: Blood on the Tracks, and Derailed: America's Worst Train Wrecks.

It has also been featured on the May 10, 1996, episode of Unsolved Mysteries.[5]

Investigation

The case remains unsolved. On April 10, 2015, the Phoenix office of the FBI announced a reward of $310,000 for information about the derailment leading to the capture of those responsible, and per what one passenger reported; he “saw two men looking at the accident, then driving off in a vehicle, presumably a pickup of unknown person, presumably SP employees.[6] The reward is still outstanding as of 2023.[7]

See also

References

  1. Labaton, Stephen (October 11, 1995). "F.B.I. Studies Note for Clues On Derailment". The New York Times. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  2. 1 2 "CNN - Sabotage suspected in derailment - Oct. 10, 1995". www.cnn.com. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
  3. Hallford, Neal (January 20, 2012). "The Derailment of the Sunset Limited". Swords & Circuitry Non-Fiction. Retrieved January 20, 2012.
  4. "56 Years Ago, A Similar Crash". The New York Times. October 11, 1995. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  5. "Amtrak Crash". Unsolved Mysteries. Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  6. "FBI offers $300K reward 20 years after Arizona train derails". Retrieved April 10, 2015.
  7. Gearty, Robert (October 11, 2020). "Sabotage of Amtrak train in Arizona desert remains unsolved 25 years later". Fox News. Retrieved October 11, 2020.

33°12′43″N 113°00′56″W / 33.211862°N 113.015445°W / 33.211862; -113.015445

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