'Absolute disastrous mess': 6 dead, 146 injured after Amtrak train derails

As day broke in Philadelphia on Wednesday morning, rescue workers were still searching inside the mangled wreckage of an Amtrak train that derailed the night before, killing at least six people and sending another 146 to various hospitals.

Temple University Hospital medical director Herb Cushing said Wednesday morning that 25 passengers were still at Temple -- the closest trauma center to the crash site -- eight of them in critical condition.

Cushing said many of the injuries suffered by passengers came when other passengers or objects fell on them.

'Disastrous mess'

\"It is an absolute, disastrous mess,\" Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter said of the crash site. \"I've never seen anything like this in my life.\"

Amtrak Northeast Regional Train 188 was traveling from Washington to New York when it derailed in the Port Richmond neighborhood of Philadelphia about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday.

The impact tore cars apart, sending seven of them flying from the tracks, and left the engine a mangled mess.

\"We have confirmed an engine and all seven cars derailed,\" a U.S. Department of Transportation representative told CNN on Wednesday, adding that the engine and two cars were left standing upright, three cars were tipped on their sides, and one was nearly flipped over on its roof. The seventh one is \"leaning hard,\" they said.

The northeast corridor, which reaches from Washington to Boston, is the busiest passenger line in the country, and the train was carrying 238 passengers and five crew members.

The cause wasn't immediately known.

\"We do not know what happened here. We do not know why it happened,\" Nutter said. There was no indication the derailment was a result of an impact with another train, he said.

So far, there's nothing to indicate the incident was an act of terrorism.

Early Wednesday morning, investigators in orange vests walked up and down the track, especially near a part where it curves.

The area of the crash is known as Frankford Junction. In 1943, it was the site of one of the nation's deadliest train accidents when The Congressional Limited crashed, killing 79 people.

\"Until the second of impact, everything was normal,\" passenger Daniel Wetrin told CNN. \"Then it was just chaos.\"

The moment of impact

Jeremy Wladis was in the very last car, eating.

\"The next thing you know, the train starts doing funny things, and it gradually starts getting worse and worse,\" he said.

Then, things started flying -- phones, laptops. \"Then people.\"

\"There were two people in the luggage rack above my head. Two women, catapulted (there).\"

Firefighters arrived to find seven cars and the train's engine either turned over or upside down. Most of the passengers were able to escape, climbing out of windows to safety. Crews had to cut through the cars to get to others.

'Please make it stop'

Janna D'Ambrisi was in the second-to-last car, reading a book when she felt the jolt.

\"Suddenly it felt like we were going a little too fast around a curve,\" she said.

The car she was in started to tip, and she was thrown onto another girl.

\"People started to fall on us,\" D'Ambrisi said.

\"I just held on to her leg and sort of bowed my head and I was kind of praying, 'Please make it stop.' \"

Fortunately, her car didn't tip over and she was able to make it out safely.

Determining why

At a news conference around 1 a.m., Mayor Nutter said he couldn't say whether all the passengers had been accounted for. Officials with the National Transportation Safety Board will arrive at the scene Wednesday morning, and the investigation into what happened will begin.

The deadliest accident in Amtrak's history took place in September 1993, when a tugboat smashed into a river bridge, causing it to collapse as an Amtrak train was passing over. The accident in Mobile, Alabama, killed 47 people.

Amtrak shut down rail service between Philadelphia and New York City on Tuesday night. It set up a special number for those seeking information on friends and family aboard the train: 1-800-523-9101.

TM & © 2015 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.

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