A New Jersey Transit bus that had no passengers yesterday slammed into the side of another NJ Transit bus carrying about 20 passengers at around 6 AM (local time) at a downtown intersection.
Joseph Barthelus, the driver of the bus carrying no passengers, was killed. He had worked for NJ Transit for 27 years, the agency said.
A female passenger on the other bus died late yesterday, said Katherine Carter, a spokeswoman for the Essex County prosecutor's office.
"We were there before anybody was on the scene," Petrain said. "It was terrible. We saw people with head injuries, leg injuries."
Investigators were trying to determine if Barthelus ran a red light, Mayor Ras Baraka said.
"We're praying for all of those in the hospital," Baraka said.
The intersection where the crash occurred was the first in the state, in 2009, to feature a surveillance camera designed to catch people running red lights. Then-Mayor Cory Booker conducted a demonstration in which he purposely rode through a red light.
Officials in Newark and other towns claimed the red light cameras reduced accidents. Critics disputed that and said the cameras were mainly used to rake in cash for cities and towns.
The force of yesterday's crash left Barthelus' bus embedded in the side of the other bus, which had come to rest on a traffic median tipped at a 30-degree angle. Firefighters pulled passengers through a side window and loaded them onto waiting stretchers and into ambulances.
The Essex County prosecutor is investigating the crash. The National Transportation Safety Board said it wasn't involved in the investigation.
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