National Transportation Safety Board member Robert Sumwalt told reporters at a press briefing yesterday that the driver of the train told investigators that he felt completely well before the accident.
"He said that he did not feel fatigued, nor did he report any illness," Sumwalt said, appearing to rule out a medical episode as the cause of the accident.
The train's 32-year-old driver noted nothing out of the ordinary during the trip, describing a very routine course of events leading up to the disaster.
He said the engineer is a longtime employee of Amtrak with years of experience at the controls of the train that travelled along the corridor - the busiest route for the US railway.
The engineer, identified by US media as 32-year-old Brandon Bostian, started working with Amtrak in 2006 as a conductor, and became an engineer in 2010.
"Since 2012, he has worked out of New York City. And he's been on this particular job for several weeks," said Sumwalt.
He added that routine drug and alcohol testing were performed on the engineer by Amtrak, as is always the case following an accident.
"We're waiting on the results of those tests," the NTSB official said.
The federal transportation agency is leading the investigation into the cause of the crash, one of the worst in years involving a US passenger train.
Amtrak Train 188 was travelling from Washington to New York when it crashed as it entered a curve while moving at a little over 160 kilometres per hour - more than twice the 50 mph speed limit, according to investigators.
Eight of the train's 243 passenger and crew were killed and dozens injured in the crash that saw some train cars overturned others reduced to heaps of twisted metal.
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