G
George B
Guest
If that makes you mad, then you really don’t want to know what games and tricks most drivers (both commercial and non-commercial) like to play when they get bored, complacent, or are in an altered state of mind. That is why in aviation we always say the most dangerous part about flying is the drive to the airport.We're perhaps getting way off topic here, but the above comment makes me mad - not at Cristobal, but at the thought that the driver might possibly have thought that way. He was the convoy leader; he had a responsibility to his truck-mates if not any driver following him. If he had made it through and if the second driver had not been able to stop, and had deaths occurred, he would in my opinion be guilty of at least voluntary manslaughter if not indeed murder (which might very well have been the case in California if his motivations could have been proven to a jury).I'm still leaning towards the theory that the truck driver was indeed trying to beat the train and tragically misjudged it's speed. I'm thinking this for a couple of reasons...
There is also the possibility that the driver thought that it would be funny to beat this train and laugh at his buddies stuck behind it.