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Engineer's family shoulders
profound grief from wreck
Source: LA Times
Published: September 30th 2008
Printer friendly version
LOS ANGELES — At 11:30 on the morning of Sept. 19, some 60 engineers
and conductors gathered at a modest La Crescenta house. They had come to
memorialize Robert Sanchez, the engineer killed a week earlier when the
Metrolink train he was driving collided with a Union Pacific freight
train.
The service was supposed to have been held at a mortuary, but after
reporters learned of the arrangements, the family hastily moved the
memorial to Sanchez's home, hoping for the chance to gather privately
with his former co-workers.
Since their arrival in California, their grief had been made much more
difficult by a crush of media attention. They were accosted at every
turn, and the pressure grew more intense after Metrolink announced --
far too quickly, in the family's eyes -- that Sanchez had failed to stop
at a red signal and caused the crash.
The mourners came bearing pizzas, sodas and cakes. One brought a flower
arrangement in the shape of a cross, which Sanchez's family placed far
from the window for fear that someone might throw a brick. Three Los
Angeles County sheriff's deputies stood guard outside.
A minister from Sanchez's union, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers
and Trainmen, spoke. His co-workers recalled trading recipes with
Sanchez and accompanying him to Mighty Ducks and Kings games. They told
the family they would help find homes for Sanchez's four Italian
greyhounds.
At 4:30, John Sanchez was in the kitchen saying goodbye to the guests
when a man from the mortuary arrived with Robert's remains.
"He walked through the alley, the back gate, the back door and handed me
Robert in a paper bag," Sanchez said.
'I want vindication'
In the first interview he has given since the crash, John Sanchez told a
Times reporter he is worried that his brother's reputation is being
destroyed and said he wants a more thorough investigation into whether
Metrolink signal lights, radios and other safety equipment were
functioning.
Sanchez said he and his family ache not only for their own loss but for
the families of the 24 others who died in the crash. "There were no
words to explain the magnitude of loss and what was in our hearts," he
said. "We do care. We are sorry.
"I want vindication, justice and truth to be known by the 25 families,"
Sanchez added.
The last time Robert Sanchez visited his family, a little less than a
year ago, he said he loved his Metrolink job despite a 53-hour-a-week,
split-shift schedule that left him constantly tired. "When I get on a
train, I forget everything and I'm focused," his mother said he told
her.
"He was mostly happy when he was on a train," she added, "That was his
whole life."
When he called the family in late July, however, Robert Sanchez was
upset because his train had struck and killed a pedestrian July 23. It
was the second time in recent years, he told them, that a man had
stepped in front of his train to commit suicide.
John Sanchez said the incidents may have been particularly upsetting
because his brother was still recovering from the suicide of his
partner, Daniel Charles Burton, who hanged himself in the garage of
their home in Crestline on Valentine's Day, 2003.
Robert Sanchez told his family that after the initial investigation of
the incident, he asked supervisors for time off and counseling but had
been required to return to work before he was ready.
Ruth Otte, a spokeswoman for Veolia Transportation, the Oak Brook, Ill.,
company that supplies Metrolink engineers, confirmed that the July
incident occurred, but said she could not comment about whether Sanchez
requested time off. Engineers are entitled to counseling and at least
three days off with pay after such incidents, another Veolia
spokeswoman, Erica Swerdlow, said.
Metrolink General Manager Tommy McDonald did not return phone calls
Monday to his home and office seeking comment. Metrolink staff members
said they have been instructed to refer questions about the crash
investigation to the National Transportation Safety Board.
Safety board spokesman Terry Williams said he could not answer questions
about Sanchez, citing the federal investigation, and a union
representative said Sanchez had not filed a complaint on the July
matter.
"We will look at any requests he may have made for time off," Williams
said. "We are still in the fact-gathering stages."
As recently as several weeks ago, Sanchez's employer praised his job
performance. In a Sept. 3 letter, Sanchez was notified that he would be
receiving an employee incentive award bonus check.
"The measurements to receive your award include safety and rules
compliance, exemplary attendance and other performance factors that
contribute to the success of this operation," McDonald wrote.
Fascinated by trains
Robert Sanchez, who was 46 at the time of his death, was the youngest of
four sons born to Rose and John Sanchez, who both worked in
manufacturing.
As a child growing up in Santa Monica, Robert counted the cars on every
passing train, his brother said.
Once, at the age of 7, he disappeared from the family car, where he was
supposed to wait while his mother ran an errand. She found him at some
nearby railroad tracks, fascinated by an idling train.
"The engineer had him up in the cab and let him blow the whistle," John
Sanchez said. "That was it. He was hooked."
When Robert Sanchez was 12, his family moved out of state, where he was
active in 4-H and the Future Farmers of America.
His love of trains continued, and he often visited a nearby rail yard.
After graduating from high school, he settled in San Diego for a time,
driving Greyhound buses before he was hired by the railroads.
He started as a maintenance worker at Union Pacific and worked his way
up to "the chair," becoming an engineer in the late 1990s, his family
said. Soon after, he began working as an Amtrak engineer in Southern
California, records show.
John Sanchez said the family has not been contacted by the National
Transportation Safety Board since the Sept. 12 crash, but said his
brother's supervisor, McDonald, had called to ask if Robert had any
medical conditions that would have caused him to pass out.
Sanchez told McDonald that his brother had adult-onset diabetes but had
never complained of complications. He said McDonald urged him to consent
to a second autopsy at a cost of about $3,000 that would be paid by
Metrolink. The family agreed.
"We just wanted the answer, whatever it took to clear his name," Sanchez
said.
Avoiding the media
Sanchez said he still hasn't recovered from the shock of his brother's
sudden death.
He was watching cable news on the afternoon of Sept. 12 when the first
report of the Metrolink train crash in Chatsworth scrolled across the
screen.
By 6 p.m., after seeing the mangled cab and learning that the train was
the one his brother usually drove, Sanchez was convinced his brother was
dead.
He realized he could not protect his 81-year-old mother from news of the
crash.
That evening, he took her hand as he had at his father's funeral the
year before.
"Be ready mom," Sanchez said he told her, "be ready for the worst you
can ever imagine."
At 6:20 the next morning, he said, official word came. Robert Sanchez
was dead. John Sanchez and his mother already had their bags packed, and
they began the long drive to Los Angeles.
On Monday, Sanchez returned to his out-of-state home.
He asked that The Times not disclose where he lives, hoping to protect
his elderly mother from more media attention.
He said he knows what to do with his brother's ashes.
Last year, after their father died, the Sanchez brothers talked about
their own wishes of what should be done when they died.
Robert asked that his ashes be scattered on the railroad tracks.
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