This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "1995 Palo Verde, Arizona, derailment" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(September 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
| Palo Verde derailment | |
|---|---|
| Location | Palo Verde,Arizona |
| Date | October 9, 1995; 30 years ago (1995-10-09) |
| Target | AmtrakSunset Limited |
Attack type | Trainderailment caused bysabotage |
| Deaths | 1 |
| Injured | 78 |
| Perpetrators | Unknown |
| Motive | Potentially retaliation for theWaco Siege |
The1995 Palo Verde derailment took place on October 9, 1995, whenAmtrak'sSunset Limited was derailed by terrorists nearPalo Verde, Arizona onSouthern Pacific Railroad tracks. Twolocomotives, AmtrakGE P32-8BWH #511 leading andEMD F40PHR #398 trailing, and eight of twelve cars derailed, four of them falling 30 feet (9 m) off a trestle bridge into a dry river bed.[1] Mitchell Bates, asleeping car attendant, was killed. Seventy-eight people were injured, 12 of them seriously and 25 were hospitalized.[2]

Four typewritten notes, attacking theATF and theFBI for the 1993Waco Siege, criticizing local law enforcement, and signed "Sons of theGestapo", were found near the scene of the wreck, indicating that notes had been left nearby.[3] All four notes were similar. One of the notes was found byNeal Hallford,[4][5][6] a passenger traveling fromOklahoma toSan Diego.
It was found that the rails had been shifted out of position to cause the derailment, but only after they had been connected with wires. This kept thetrack circuit closed, circumventing safety systems designed to warn locomotive engineers of track problems, and suggested that the saboteurs had a working knowledge of railroads. The attack was likened to the1939 wreck of theCity of San Francisco, in which a similar method killed 24 people.[7]
Following the incident, Amtrak President Thomas Downs told CNN that improved monitoring and security measures have greatly reduced the chances of a similar incident.[2]
After 1996, theSunset Limited was rerouted to south ofPhoenix (approaching no closer thanMaricopa) due to the desire ofUnion Pacific to abandon this stretch of track for its through trains between southernNew Mexico and southernCalifornia.[8] The section of track, now known as the Roll Industrial Lead of thePhoenix Subdivision, on which the derailment took place is now used as storage track only.[citation needed]
The cause of this wreck has been explored in a couple of major documentaries, including:Why Trains Crash: Blood on the Tracks, “Investigative Reports: Danger on the Rails” andDerailed: America's Worst Train Wrecks.
It has also been featured on the May 10, 1996, episode ofUnsolved Mysteries.[9] and Parcasts’ Conspiracy Theories podcast on Spotify on April 17, 2024.
The case received a "major case" investigation dubbed SPLITRAIL and remains officially unsolved.[10] The FBI dispatched 90 agents to the crime scene, many of whom were removed from the Kingman investigative branch of theOklahoma City Bombing investigation.Timothy McVeigh had lived in Kingman withMichael Fortier, who was interviewed in the investigation.[11]
On December 14, 1995, the FBI raided theVal Verde home of a railroad salvage company executive, John Ernest Olin, in connection with the investigation. Olin had business disputes withBNSF andApache Railway, but the train involved in the derailment was an Amtrak train running on Southern Pacific tracks. Olin denied ever visiting the area of the derailment and was released.[12]
The journalistWill Grigg interviewed an electrical engineer who claimed to have known members of a neo-Nazi drug trafficking syndicate associated with McVeigh inAnaheim. According to the electrical engineer, McVeigh taught his associates how to derail trains, and the derailment was "carried out by some of the people who helped McVeigh build the bomb for Oklahoma City."[13] Those associates per journalist Mark S. Hamm were theAryan Republican Army, who went by the name "King of Kings" and plotted train derailments.[14] ARA memberRichard Guthrie wrote in his memoir that another member, Mark Thomas, wanted to organize the organization into cells, one of which would derail trains.[citation needed]
In 2003, an FBI Inspector General audit revealed SPLITRAIL ranked the 15th largest case between October 1995 and June 2002.[15]
On April 10, 2015, the Phoenix office of the FBI announced a reward of $310,000 for information about the derailment leading to the capture of those responsible.[16] The reward is still outstanding as of 2025[update].[17]
The "stale investigation rule" is a legal principle that a criminal investigation can become invalid if it is not pursued within a reasonable timeframe, and it can invalidate evidence used to obtain search warrants; as such, the FBI's claim of conducting an open investigation 30 years after the incident is likely an attempt to avoid disclosure of the SPLITRAIL files under theFreedom of Information Act and Executive Order 13526.[citation needed]
33°12′43″N113°00′56″W / 33.211862°N 113.015445°W /33.211862; -113.015445