Perceval said:Possibility of Being said:Also, don't you think the driver's reaction seems a bit bizarre even when taking into account a huge shock he must have been in?
The train had two drivers and one was in hospital, the Galicia government said. It was not immediately clear which driver was under investigation or in hospital. The train was operated by state-owned company Renfe. Newspaper accounts cited witnesses as saying one driver, Francisco Jose Garzon, who had helped rescue victims, shouted into a phone: "I've derailed! What do I do?". El Pais newspaper said one of the drivers told the railway station by radio after being trapped in his cabin that the train entered the bend at 190 kilometers per hour (120 mph), twice the permitted speed. "We're only human! We're only human!" he told the station, the newspaper said, citing sources close to the investigation. "I hope there are no dead, because this will fall on my conscience." Investigators were trying to urgently establish why the train was going so fast and why failsafe security devices to keep speed within permitted limits had not worked [source]
The report I read in Spanish said he was walking back and forth on the tracks repeating "I derailed, what am I going to do...."
Yeah, that's how I understood that from the beginning, guessing there was a translation error. But that's not the part that sticks out most to me. That's the "we are only human" part. When do you usually say such a thing? When you make a mistake, overlook something, or are too weak to do something you think you should do. This kind of situations. Not when you are allegedly driving a train full of people at double permitted speed because... because of what? Out of fantasy? Cavalier attitude? Doesn't make sense. Assuming that's what he actually said (which may not be true), the only scenario I can think of for such comments to be said is some sort of a blackmail situation. You're forced to derail the train and the pressure is so big, and the price you are going to pay for not doing so is so high, that you do it and hope for the best possible outcome...
I know that's a bit a side issue in the whole picture, so fwiw...
Kniall said:This odd detail needs to be explained. If the driver knew he was going too fast, and had time to contact his operator to inform them that he was about to derail, why was he unable to do anything to avoid the outcome he foresaw?
http://www.news.nom.co/spain-train-crash-driver-had-boasted-news/
Spain train crash: Driver: 'I'm at 190kmph and we're going to derail!'
The driver of the train that crashed in northern Spain, killing at least 78 people, made a panicked phone call moments before the crash saying that the train was going too fast.
Remote control? Makes me thinking about this thread:
https://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,31644.msg423330.html#msg423330
Perceval said:I think this article says it all
Researchers Show How a Car’s Electronics Can Be Taken Over Remotely