On June 1st last year , the National Transportation Safety Board recreated last May’s green line crash in order to gain more insight into what happened that fateful day. More than a year later, the board has released its report, which indicates that the car’s driver ran through a properly functioning signal en route to the crash. While driver Terrese Edmonds’ train did run a working signal, the crash was caused by hitting a train stopped at a malfunctioning signal. This broken signal had been stuck on red for some time; investigators found that broken track section connections were the cause of the perpetual stop sign. In contrast to this May’s texting-caused green line crash , driver Terrese Edmonds was not on her cell phone last year. WBZ reports that Edmonds “was not impaired by drugs or alcohol at the time of the crash” (perhaps referring to illegal drugs), but the Globe says she had Doxylamine (a sleep aid and ingredient in NyQuil) in her system. Whether Edmonds was drowsy with Doxylamine or just plain distracted, the crash clearly should not have happened.

Originally posted here:
A Year Later, NTSB Finds that MBTA Driver Skipped Signal, Was on Sleep Medication?