On a more serious note, according to a posting on another board here is what happened (I am paraphrasing below from the original):
1. 717 picked up an additional Engineer for qualification run at Merced. He had prior incident - running a red and almost colliding head-on into a freight) which caused him to require re-qualification.
2. At EMY the experienced engineer dropped back to the cab car leaving the inexperienced Engineer in charge, just so that they could get out of OKJ and get to the yard quickly. That doesn't sound proper does it?
3. At CP King St 717 got a yellow, with the red over red at CP North Jack London, which should be clearly visible from CP King St, unless there was fog. But still yellow means be prepared to stop at the next signal anyway.
4. 717 carried on past the red over red and into the same track as 14, and emergency brakes were applied as it crossed the switch.
5. 717 collided into 14 at 15mph or so, derailing the front axle of both locomotives.
6. Both engineers got off and went over to the cab of 14 to try to get their version of the story agreed upon to tell investigators. Apparently the crew of 14 declined to participate in that conspiracy. The Engineer who was the proximate cause of the crash also took the trouble to talk to the CBS news person and gave his name to the person, a complete no-no according to protocol.
7. A download of CTC confirmed that the signals were displaying as stated in (3) above.
8. It is a truly damning indictment of Amtrak management if the following is true: "When he (the Engineer in the loco) was a student, ever(y) instructor told the company he had no business running a train, and his evaluations even reflected that. The union said the same thing when they hired him to be an engineer."
And yet he was re-qualifying and he was left in the cab alone!!!!
Not a very comforting thought if all that is true. If this is true then no amount of protection and safety protocols can keep the passengers safe. This would fall in the category of crass negligence, and an organizational problem and an apparent culture of reckless disregard of procedures that are in place to ensure safety.
I would hasten to add that only the final investigation report can say definitive things about the incident. However, if the info above is true then I would be very worried about riding a train at least in California.
But of course not as much worried as I would be about riding a car in California though :-/