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Investigators to comb deadly prison bus crash site in Texas

ODESSA, Texas (AP) - Investigators trying to determine the cause of a West Texas prison bus crash that killed eight inmates and two guards were returning to the site Thursday to sift through the debris and examine the vehicle.

The state Department of Criminal Justice bus skidded on an icy overpass, slid down an embankment and collided with a passing Union Pacific freight train Wednesday morning, leaving the bus a crumpled mass and scattering packages from the train alongside the track in Penwell, just west of Odessa.

Eight prisoners and two long-time veteran prison department officers, including the driver, were killed, the agency said in a statement. Another corrections officer and four other inmates were hospitalized.

"It's as bad as you can imagine," Odessa Fire and Rescue Battalion Chief Kavin Tinney told the Odessa American newspaper Wednesday. "In 32 years, it's as bad as anything I've seen."

The prisoners did not have seat belts and were handcuffed together in pairs, officials said. Some of them were ejected from the bus after it struck the train, said Trooper Elizabeth Barney of the Texas Department of Public Safety. Jason Heaton, agency director for the region, said the prisoners were not wearing leg restraints, and that the driver's seat had a seat belt.

An earlier accident on the I-20 overpass may have contributed to the prison bus losing control, Ector County Sheriff Mark Donaldson said, adding that the road had been slick with ice.

A state prison system spokesman said the bus was new and had been placed in service over the summer.

National Transportation Safety Board and Texas Department of Public Safety officials planned to investigate further on Thursday.

A prison system statement identified the correctional officers killed as Christopher Davis, 53, and Eligio Garcia, 45. The inmates killed were Byron Wilson, 34; Tyler Townsend, 29; Jesus Reyna, 44; Kaleb Wise, 22; Adolfo Ruiz, 32; Michael Sewart, 25; Angel Vasquez, 31; and Jeremiah Rodriguez, 35.

Davis had more than 17 years of service with the Department of Criminal Justice, and Garcia had nearly 23 years. The inmates were serving sentences that ranged from one year for labeling unauthorized recordings to 20 years for drug possession with intent to distribute, according to online prison records.

Correctional officer Jason Self, 38, and 22-year-old inmates Terry Johnson and Damien Rodriguez were hospitalized in critical condition, the prison system said. Inmates Remigio Pineda, 34, and Hector Rivera, 37, were in serious condition.

The prisoners were being transported from the Middleton prison in Abilene to the Sanchez prison in El Paso, when the accident happened around 7:30 a.m. about 250 miles east of their destination.

Two containers at the back of the train were damaged in the collision, causing hundreds of parcels to drop along the trackside while the train ground to a halt, said Mark Davis, a railroad spokesman.

No Union Pacific employees were injured.

The train was traveling from the Los Angeles area to Marion, Arkansas.

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Associated Press writers David Warren, Terry Wallace and Diana Heidgerd contributed to this report from Dallas.

Debris is scattered along the train tracks as officials investigate a crash involving a Texas Department of Criminal Justice bus and a train Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015 near Penwell, Texas. A bus carrying state prisoners skidded off an icy highway overpass, slid down an embankment and collided with a train. At least 10 people were killed in the crash, including eight prisoners and two guards, and four prisoners and another guard were injured, authorities said. (AP Photo/Odessa American, Mark Sterkel) The Associated Press
Officials investigate the scene of a prison transport bus crash, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015, in Penwell, Texas. Law enforcement officials said the bus carrying prisoners and corrections officers fell from an overpass in West Texas and crashed onto train tracks below, killing at least 10 people. (AP Photo/Odessa American, Mark Sterkel) The Associated Press
Officials investigate the scene of a prison transport bus crash in Penwell, Texas, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015. Law enforcement officials said the bus carrying prisoners and corrections officers fell from an overpass in West Texas and crashed onto train tracks below, killing an unspecified number of people. (AP Photo/The Odessa American, Mark Sterkel) The Associated Press
Boxes are strewn out of a UPS train car that was damaged when a Texas Department of Criminal Justice transport bus lost control on Interstate 20, went down an embankment and crashed into the moving train Wednesday morning, Jan. 14, 2014 near Penwell, Texas. At least 10 people were killed in the crash, including eight prisoners and two guards, and four prisoners and another guard were injured, authorities said. (AP Photo/Odessa American, Mark Sterkel) The Associated Press
Texas Department of Criminal Justice officials walk outside the emergency room entrance at Medical Center Hospital, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015, in Odessa, Texas. Law enforcement officials said a prison transport bus, carrying corrections officers and prisoners, fell from an overpass in nearby Penwell and collided with a passing freight train, killing at least 10 people. (AP Photo/Odessa American, Courtney Sacco) The Associated Press
Authorities investigate the scene of a prison bus crash, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015, in Penwell, Texas. Law enforcement officials said the bus, carrying prisoners and corrections officers, fell from an overpass in West Texas and collided with a passing freight train, killing at least 10 people. (AP Photo/Odessa American, Mark Sterkel) The Associated Press
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