Spanish Train Driver Charged, Admits Fault

The driver of a train that crashed in northern Spain, killing 79 people, has been formally charged with multiple cases of negligent homicide.
According to Sky News, Francisco Jose Garzon Amo was charged on Sunday night after appearing for two hours before Judge Luis Alaez.

Meanwhile, according to a BBC report, officials said Garzon had admitted negligence by being careless when rounding a bend too fast.

The 52-year-old is suspected of driving too fast on a dangerous section of the line near the city of Santiago de Compostela.
Reports suggest the train was travelling at around 190km per hour (120mph), more than twice the 80km per hour (50mph) speed limit when it entered the bend.

Garzon, has refused to make a statement or answer questions about the crash.
His court appearance was closed and the judge decided to release him without bail.

He was not sent to jail or required to post bail as none of the parties involved felt there was a risk of him attempting to flee or destroy evidence.
Garzon will be required to appear before the court once a week and surrender his passport, and is banned from driving trains for six months, a statement from the court said.

The hearing came as the number of dead from the crash rose to 79 when an injured passenger died in hospital.
Authorities said forensic experts have identified the last three bodies among those killed when the intercity train derailed and smashed into a concrete wall.

They did not reveal the victims’ names but said their families had been informed.
A large funeral mass is planned for this afternoon, with the prime minister and members of the Spanish royal family expected to attend.

Meanwhile, a resident of the town where the train crashed has claimed Garzon admitted going fast and said he “wanted to die” in the aftermath of the crash.

In a television interview broadcast on Spain’s Antena 3, Evaristo Iglesias said he and another person accompanied Garzon to a stretch of flat ground where other injured people were being laid out, waiting for emergency services to arrive.
Mr Iglesias said: “He told us that he wanted to die.”

Officials have so far not said how fast the train was going when it derailed and it is not clear whether the brakes failed or were never used.

The “black box” that records journey data is with the investigating judge.

All eight carriages of the train, packed with 218 passengers, careered off the track on the express route between Madrid and Ferrol on the Galician coast.

The train cut through electricity lines and leaking diesel fuel burst into flames in some carriages.

At least 130 people were taken to hospital after the crash, with 70 still in hospital and 22 remaining in a critical condition.
Five US citizens and one Briton were among the injured and one American was among the dead.

Two separate investigations are being carried out into the catastrophe – one to look into possible failings by the driver and the other to examine the train’s in-built speed regulation systems and see if it was a technical malfunction that meant the driver was not warned of the reduced speed limit around the bend.