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Hatfield rail crash

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The memorial garden created alongside the East Coast Main Line for those who died in the Hatfield rail crash.
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The memorial garden created alongside the East Coast Main Line for those who died in the Hatfield rail crash.
The Hatfield rail crash was a railway accident that occurred on 17 October 2000, at Hatfield, Hertfordshire, UK. Although the accident had a low death toll in comparison to other railway incidents in British history, Hatfield's historical significance has become much greater, since it demonstrated many of the flaws present in the mid 1990s privatisation of the British railway system and ultimately triggered its partial renationalisation.

A Great North Eastern Railway InterCity 225 train bound for Leeds had left London King's Cross at 1210 local time. It was travelling at over 115mph, when it suddenly derailed south of Hatfield station at around 1224. Four people were killed and a further seventy injured. Those who died were:

A preliminary investigation found that a rail had fragmented while the train had passed over it, and that the likely cause was "gauge corner cracking" (microscopic cracks in the rails). This led to temporary speed restrictions being imposed on huge lengths of Britain's railways, effectively crippling many routes, while checks were carried out on the rails. It was found that the incidence of cracks similar to those that caused the rail failure at Hatfield was alarmingly high throughout the country's railway lines.

As a result, Railtrack, the company that owned Britain's railway tracks, instigated a nationwide (and costly) track replacement programme. The spiralling costs set in motion the series of events which resulted in the ultimate collapse of the company, and its replacement by the not-for-profit company Network Rail.

Court case

In 2003 six people and two companies – Network Rail (as successors of Railtrack) and the division of Balfour Beatty that maintained the track – were charged with manslaughter in connection with the accident (see corporate manslaughter). Charges against Network Rail/Railtrack and some of its executives were dropped in September 2004, but the other charges still stood. The trial began in January 2005; the judge, Mr Justice Mackay, warned that it could take as long as a year. On 14 July the judge instructed the jury to acquit all the defendants on the charges of manslaughter. A few days later Balfour Beatty changed its plea to guilty on the health and safety charges, and on 6 September Network Rail was found guilty of breaching health and safety law. All of the executives who had been charged were acquitted.

A key issue which the court considered was the extent to which the poor condition of the rail was known in advance, and to consider any acts or failures to act that resulted.

See also

External links

 


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