A train crashed into a flatbed trailer carrying wounded veterans at a parade in Midland, Texas, on Thursday. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.
By NBC News staff
Updated at 9:39 p.m. ET: A train crashed into a tractor-trailer carrying wounded veterans and their spouses?in a parade in Midland, Texas, killing at least four people, authorities told NBC News.
At least 17 people were hospitalized, city officials said. About 24 veterans and their spouses were on the tractor-trailer, according to the Midland Reporter-Telegram. ?
NBC station KWES of Midland said the tractor-trailer was part of the Show of Support / Hunt for Heroes parade carrying veterans and their spouses to a banquet in their honor. The benefit dinner was being put on by Show of Support, Military Hunt Inc. in Midland on Thursday night, according to the organization's website.
Midland police spokesman Ryan Stout said the crash occurred at 4:36 p.m. local time when an eastbound train hit the flatbed trailer. He said the flatbed was the last of two in the parade attempting to cross the tracks.
"It's hard to look at. It's a very tragic event, very unfortunate," Midland Police Chief Price Robinson told Reuters.
James Durbin / Midland Reporter-Telegram
Bystanders react after a flatbed tractor-trailer carrying wounded veterans and their families during a parade was struck by a train Thursday in Midland, Texas.
The parade and banquet were leading up to whitetail deer-hunting trip for the veterans,?according to the Midland Reporter-Telegram.?Show of Support president and founder Terry Johnson told the KEWS that the events were canceled.
According the website, the organization demonstrates support for members of the military and seeks to bring public awareness of hunting and fishing.
There have been 477 railway-related fatalities between January and August of this year, according to federal railroad safety data. Of those, 93 were related to Union Pacific Railroad, which covers 23 states across the western United States.
In a statement, Union Pacific spokesman Tom Lange said the crossing has a gate and lights.
?Our preliminary investigation indicates that the lights and gates were operating at the time. Additionally our two person crew sounded the locomotive horn,? Lange said.
Lange said the two-person Union Pacific crew was uninjured.
The National Transportation Safety Board tells NBC that a team has been sent to investigate the accident.
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