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(Photo: Dodge County Sheriff's Office)

 

The scene was grim. The Wisconsin highway was covered in a thick, dark red substance as far as the eye could see. The air was thick with the smell of...um...Skittles. It was Skittles. WTF. 

The size and speed of trains brings death and destruction to anyone and anything in their path. The main forms of train accidents are train derailments, train and pedestrian accidents, and train and car accidents.

To learn about train accidents in San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose, go to the Federal Railroad Administration site.

Truckers are a growing motorist group using California’s highways, and commercial trucking accidents occur regularly in the San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose region. When a truck crash happens, serious injuries and fatalities are a common result.

Common causes of commercial truck accidents in San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose

According to IIHS, a large percentage of trucking crashes are caused by:

According to the U.S. Coast Guard, from 2013 to 2014, deaths increased from 560 to 610, an 8.9% increase, injuries increased from 2,620 to 2,678, a 2.2% increase and the total number of accidents increased from 4,062 to 4,064, a 0.05% increase. Where the cause of death was known, 78% of fatal boating accident victims drowned; of those drowning victims, 84% were not wearing a life jacket.

As mass transit systems grow across California, bus accidents occur regularly. When a bus crash happens, serious injuries and fatalities are a common result.

Common causes of bus accidents in San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose

According to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, over the past 10 years:

The number of buses involved in fatal crashes decreased from 274 to 251, an 8% drop;

In the latest "Trust nothing; fear everything" news, a FedEx truck was smashed in half by a speeding train after the railroad crossing's warning system failed on every level.

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Disclosure

Throughout Accident Data Center’s site, you will find links to products we think our audience may be interested in. These are primarily car safety-related products that we learn about and want to share in the interest of improving public safety or simply for our readers’ enjoyment. For convenience, we have provided links to products where appropriate.

Just in time for the Super Bowl, Tostitos is releasing a limited-edition "Party Safe" bag that can detect if you have alcohol on your breath when you blow into the bag. If a light at the bottom of the bag turns green, no alcohol is detected, but keep in mind that it's a chip bag. If the bag does detect alcohol, the light flashes red and displays a "don’t drink and drive" message along the bottom.

Photo Copyright: schlag12/123RF Stock Photo

 

I'm starting to think that my plan to get away with shoplifting by blaming it on my 6-month-old baby might be less than iron-clad.

The Newburyport Daily News reports that after being caught speeding in November, Haverhill man Dennis Sayers attempted to fight the $105 ticket by claiming that the officer who clocked him going 40 mph in 30 mph zone was actually reading a deer: