Crime & Safety
SEPTA Restores Service to Trenton, Chestnut Hill Lines
The regional rail lines were shut down in the aftermath of last week's derailment in Philadelphia.

SEPTA’s regional rail lines are slowly returning to normal as the tracks closed during the aftermath of last week’s deadly Amtrak derailment resumed service Monday.
According to the transit service’s website, service on the Trenton line has resumed operations with no outbound stops at North Philadelphia, Bridesburg and Tacony Stations and no inbound stops at North Philadelphia Station.
All Chestnut Hill stations have returned to normal service. The West Trenton line, which ran additional trains last week to help with the overload of passengers, have also resumed its normal schedule. According to Philly.com, Monday morning commuters saw heavy delays as the service returned, with some back-ups lasting approximately one hour.
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Amtrak also announced the full restoration to the Northeast Corridor on Monday as the investigation into the cause of the crash continues.
In addition to eight fatalities, more than 200 people were injured in the derailment, which happened at the Port Richmond area of Philadelphia.
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The following people were victims of the crash:
- Laura Finamore, 47, of Douglaston, N.Y., who worked in corporate real estate, according to an online statement from the family.
- Italian national Giuseppe Piras, who was visiting the United States on business.
- Bob Gildersleeve, 45, of Maryland, who was reportedly in the first car of the traintraveling from Washington to New York when it crashed, according to NBCPhiladelphia. He was pulled from the wreckage of Amtrak train 188 Thursday, two days after it derailed north of Philadelphia, according to reports.
- Justin Zemser, 20, a student from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis;
- Derrick Griffith, 42, dean of student affairs and enrollment management at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn, N.Y.;
- Jim Gaines, 48, an employee of the Associated Press who lived in Plainsboro, N.J.;
- Abid Gilani, a senior vice president at Wells Fargo; and
- Rachel Jacobs, CEO of a Philadelphia tech firm who lived in Manhattan.
Amtrak President and CEO Joe Boardman expressed his sympathies to the families in his statement and said the company accepts full responsibility for the crash.
Related stories:
- FBI Asked To Probe Claim That Amtrak Train Was Struck Before Crashing
- UPDATE: All Eight Fatal Victims From Amtrak Crash Identified
- UPDATE: Train May Have Been Traveling 100 MPH, 7 Reported Killed In Amtrak Derailment In Pennsylvania
- New Jersey Passengers Injured After 7 Killed In Amtrak ‘Mass Casualty’ Derailment
- New Jersey Man Among Dead In Amtrak Train Derailment
- Philly CEO Reported Missing from Amtrak Derailment
- Midshipman Killed In Amtrak Crash
- WATCH: 13-Year-Old Boy Asks for Help Finding Dad Missing In Fatal Amtrak Train Crash
- Howard County Man Killed in Amtrak Derailment
- Amtrak Employee Files First Derailment Lawsuit
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