3 killed as Amtrak train hit car near Brentwood were headed to funeral fundraiser
BRENTWOOD, Calif. - Three women killed when an Amtrak commuter train smashed into their car near Brentwood were headed to a fundraiser at a vineyard for a resident who died less than a week ago.
The crash occurred Sunday around 1 p.m. in a rural area near Brentwood, about an hour’s drive southeast of San Francisco, the California Highway Patrol reported.
Two others had major injuries and were transported to a hospital, said Steve Aubert, fire marshal with the East Contra Costa Fire Protection District.
Authorities said the two were an adult and a child but there was no immediate word on their conditions.
The Amtrak train slammed into the car, sending it careening off a long dirt driveway and into another vehicle. The private train crossing has no railroad crossing gates, lights or signals, the East Bay Times reported.
Aubert said Monday there are signs posted on both sides of the tracks warning of fast-moving trains. He said the trains are allowed to go up to 80 mph through that area.
None of the 85 passengers and crew members was injured in the collision, Aubert said.
The women killed were identified by the Contra Costa County Coroner’s Office as Julia Mondragon, 41, of Dixon; Maria Nieves, 72, of Dixon and Mercedes Regalado, 51, of Antioch.
The deadly crash happened about 300 feet from an outdoor fundraiser for the family of a Brentwood resident who died less than a week ago, one of the people there to mourn, Fatima Jimenez, told the newspaper.
Jimenez said she ran out of the fundraiser and found two women dead on the ground, along with a bloodied child, and helped pull a man from the wreckage.
"People fainted when they heard what was going on," Jimenez said. "It was chaotic. There are no words to describe it — I’m still in shock."
Mitch Bloomfield, who owns the Bloomfield Vineyards property where the fundraiser was held, told the newspaper he installed his own signs on each side of the tracks declaring "TRAINS!!" after repeatedly asking BNSF Railway to install a railroad crossing gate with lights and signals.
"I’ve called BNSF countless times to have them put in a crossing there," he said. "They make a lot of money but they don’t like to spend it."
"Hopefully now this is more of an important thing," he added.
A message to BNSF Railway seeking comment was not immediately answered Monday.
In Missouri, three people were killed and several others were injured Monday when a passenger train traveling from Los Angeles to Chicago struck a dump truck and derailed in a remote, rural area of Missouri, officials said.