Official: Train brake automatically activated in fatal wreck

AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

A damaged train car sits on a flatbed trailer at left as work continues to remove other cars at the scene of an Amtrak train crash onto Interstate 5 a day earlier Tuesday in DuPont, Wash.

AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, right, talks with Washington State Patrol Chief John Batiste after they spoke to media members near the scene of an Amtrak train crash onto Interstate 5 a day earlier Tuesday in DuPont, Wash.

AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

Workers look over tracks near the rear car of a crashed Amtrak train that remains standing where the southbound tracks make a curve left Tuesday in DuPont, Wash.

AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

A damaged Amtrak train car is lowered from an overpass at the scene of Monday’s deadly train crash onto Interstate 5 Tuesday in DuPont, Wash. Federal investigators say they don’t yet know why the Amtrak train was traveling 50 mph over the speed limit when it derailed Monday south of Seattle.

DUPONT, Wash. — Investigators are looking into whether the Amtrak engineer whose speeding train plunged off an overpass, killing at least three people, was distracted by the presence of an employee-in-training next to him in the locomotive, a federal official said Tuesday.

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