January 3, 2007 accidentBackgroundThe coach was on route number 592 4and was heading towards Aberdeen. It left London Victoria at 22:30 (GMT) and was due to arrive at Aberdeen Coach Park at 10:30 (GMT) on 4 January 2007. The coach was also due to stop at Carlisle and Glasgow and other points in the United Kingdom before reaching Aberdeen as its final destination.4 The coach involved in the crash was registered "LSK 027". Crash and emergency responseThe crash occurred on the slip road connecting the westbound M4 motorway to the northbound (clockwise, remembering that vehicles drive on the left hand side of the road in the UK) M25 motorway at approximately the point where the slip road merges with the slip road from the eastbound M4 . At this point the slip road is on a downhill gradient with a right turn with decreasing radius, necessitating a posted advisory speed limit of 40 miles per hour. Emergency services are reported to have classed the accident as a category B, which meant that the first ambulance did not arrive until 14 minutes after the call.citation needed A total of five fire appliances, twenty London ambulances, eight doctors and one specialist Fire Service unit attended the accident scene.2 The injured were treated at six different hospitals. Thirty eight passengers were taken to Hillingdon Hospital, 16 to Charing Cross Hospital, seven to West Middlesex Hospital in Isleworth, four to St. Peter's Hospital in Chertsey, one child was taken to St. Mary's Hospital in Paddington and another child to Wexham Park Hospital in Slough.1 Two people were killed in the crash, one being a man of Chinese origin and the other being a woman named Chris Munro Toner, 76, of Monifieth, Dundee, Scotland.2 Another passenger, John Carruthers, 78, of Chertsey, Surrey, died on 1st July 2007 from injuries sustained in the crash. Several others of the 67 passengers on board the coach were seriously injured; some have had limbs amputated because of their injuries.2 InvestigationThe coach was removed from the motorway for subsequent investigation. Local police sealed off the area where the accident happened for a period. The police later confirmed that no other vehicles were involved in the accident5 The driver of the coach was arrested on suspicion of dangerous driving,2 but was released on police bail.6. The driver was Phil Rooney 7. AftermathNational Express has taken its remaining 11 Neoplan Double Deck Skyliners off the road for safety checks.5 These are all operated on behalf of National Express by Trathens Travel Services of Plymouth, which is a subsidiary of Park's of Hamilton. They were relatively new at the time of the crash, being delivered in October 2006. The vast majority of the National Express fleet comprises single deck coaches and services are not likely to be affected by the recall.citation needed It was originally reported that the coaches would be stopped where they were (i.e. motorway hard shoulder) but this was corrected to that they would be stopped at their destination. Neoplan announced on 5 January that all the coaches had passed their safety checks, and were ready to return to service. September 3, 2007 accidentWikinews has related news:
The coach was operating the 777 National Express service from Birmingham to Stansted Airport, with 33 passengers on board at the time of the accident. Of the 33 on board, 30 were injured, six with serious injuries. Following the accident, the driver of the coach was arrested by Thames Valley Police on suspicion of both drink driving and dangerous driving. References
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