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Articles: Passenger train halted by rock attack at Coomera

Started by Derwan, November 15, 2009, 12:41:03 PM

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Derwan

From the Courier Mail:

Quote
POLICE and Queensland Rail are investigating a dangerous attack on a passenger train on the Gold Coast this morning.
About 6.10am the driver of a northbound train spotted what appeared to be a milk crate full of rocks on the line 300m north of the Hope Island overpass at Coomera.

The driver slowed but could not stop in time and collided with the crate.

About the same time, up to five rocks were thrown at the train with one becoming embedded in the front windscreen.

Police said the train driver was unhurt but badly shaken.

The 46 passengers on board the train heading for Brisbane Airport were then transferred to another train to finish their journey.

Police have appealed for anyone with information about those responsible to contact Crimestoppers on 1800 333 000.

``It's a very stupid thing to do and potentially a very dangerous thing to do,'' said Regional Duty Officer Inspector Steve Apps.

Honestly - how stupid are these people?  If caught, perhaps we should throw rocks at THEM - see how they like it!
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haakon

Heh, a public stoning does have a certain appropriateness as a form of punishment for the crime....

ozbob

From the Brisbanetimes click here!

Police hope bragging may undo rock throwers


The shattered windscreen of the northbound Gold Coast train after vandals pelted it with rocks from above. Photo: Queensland Rail http://images.brisbanetimes.com.au/2009/11/15/860789/15112009(002)-420x0.jpg

QuotePolice hope bragging may undo rock throwers
TONY BARTLETT
November 16, 2009 - 1:05PM
The shattered windscreen of the northbound Gold Coast train after vandals pelted it with rocks from above.

The shattered windscreen of the northbound Gold Coast train after vandals pelted it with rocks from above. Photo: Queensland Rail

Police are hoping bragging about their deed might be the undoing of whoever pelted a Gold Coast passenger train with rocks on Sunday morning.

Police say the culprits put a plastic milk crate half full of rocks on the tracks and pelted the northbound train with stones as it slowed near the Hope Island Road overpass at Coomera about 6.10am.

Detective Senior Sergeant Mark Procter said on Monday police have no new leads to go on and security camera footage of the area has been of no help to their inquiries.

Sgt Procter said he's hoping the culprits brag about their exploits.

"Being the start of the new school week, hopefully the talk will start going around and we'll get some fresh information that way," he said.

"We have a very close relationship with all the schools and we'll be canvassing everyone in the area."

Detectives are also hoping forensic tests on the milk crate could yield results.

"We won't know that for a few days," Sgt Procter said.

"The crate is undergoing DNA and fingerprint forensic tests and we'll be getting those results by about Wednesday."

AAP
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O_128

if i had been driver and seen any on kids on the tracks i would have run them down.
"Where else but Queensland?"

#Metro

Negative people... have a problem for every solution. Posts are commentary and are not necessarily endorsed by RAIL Back on Track or its members.

mufreight

Whoever did this should be charged with attempted manslaughter or an act of terrorism and dealt with accordingly by the courts and jailed for a period of years. 
Jug a couple of these mentaly deficent people for a substantial time and give the entire process the maximum media exposure and watch the incidence of such stupidity decrease.

O_128

imagine if the driver had been knocked out? are you able to remotely stop a train at 140kpm?
"Where else but Queensland?"

p858snake

Quote from: O_128 on November 16, 2009, 20:33:06 PMimagine if the driver had been knocked out? are you able to remotely stop a train at 140kpm?
The second guard/driver should be able to from their end of the train or their room in the middle.

STB

One of the many reasons why I'm against the removal of Guards...but that's for another topic for another day.

p858snake

Also wouldn't someone activating the emergency door open button active the auto warning system and start to slow the train down, or is only for track base events?

Derwan

Quote from: O_128 on November 16, 2009, 20:33:06 PM
imagine if the driver had been knocked out? are you able to remotely stop a train at 140kpm?

Trains are equipped with a "dead man's pedal".  The ones in the citytrains have to be kept half way down with your foot.  (Kinda like driving a car without cruise control.)  Release the pedal or press it all the way down, the train stops.  I only know this because we got to drive the simulator at Mayne during a RailBOT-organised trip.
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ozbob

From the Brisbanetimes click here!

Rocks in their head as bus attacks surge

QuoteRocks in their head as bus attacks surge
DANIEL HURST
November 17, 2009 - 5:38AM

Brisbane City Council buses have seen a 16 per cent rise in rock-throwing and slingshot attacks in the past year, figures released to brisbanetimes.com.au have revealed.

The release of the figures came as police continued their hunt for the criminals who hurled stones at a train on the Gold Coast line after leaving a rock-filled milk crate on the tracks on Sunday.

Queensland Rail, Translink and the Queensland Police Service yesterday said they were unable to provide figures on the frequency of rock attacks against train services.

However, buses continue to be a popular target for rock throwers despite public pleas from police and transport officials for the vandals to stop endangering lives.

A Council spokesman last night said there had been 236 rock and slingshot incidents involving buses between January 1 this year and the end of last month.

This was 33 higher than the number of incidents recorded over the same period last year, he said.

Council last week decided to boost its existing $36,000 a month bus network patrols, with a security car now specifically tailing services on the 330 route travelling through rock-throwing hotspots Bracken Ridge and Chermside on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights.

Public and Active Transport Chair Jane Prentice said the authority had also rolled out anti-shatter glass and employed security guards on all NightLink services.

"The safety of our bus drivers and passengers is paramount and if we have to protect them from the stupidity of a select few, then we will," she said.

"All these measures are also helping the police to identify and catch offenders."

Police yesterday said they had no new leads in their investigation into the attack on the northbound train near the Hope Island Road overpass at Coomera on Sunday about 6.10am.

By tomorrow, detectives should receive the results of DNA and fingerprint forensic tests on the milk crate that was half-filled with rocks and left on the railway line.

brisbanetimes.com.au has been told security footage from the train itself had not helped investigators because it was not fitted with a forward-facing camera.

Although all QR trains have security cameras pointed at passengers in carriages, it is understood older trains are not equipped with devices recording external footage in the direction of travel.

Bond University criminologist Paul Wilson said authorities generally found it hard to track down rock throwers and, like arsonists, they would only be caught if people came forward with information quickly.

"It's an act of vandalism but a particularly malicious form of vandalism where the perpetrators must know they can potentially injure or kill people," Professor Wilson said.

"You'd have to be nearly mentally deficient not to realise you can potentially kill or hurt people."

Earlier this year, the State Government announced new laws to punish rock throwers with up to two years jail for those convicted of endangering the safe use of a vehicle.

It said the new offence would target those at the lower end of the scale, while those who caused serious injury or death would face more serious existing criminal charges.

Rock throwers have targeted buses, trains, taxis, ambulances and other vehicles in recent years.

A nine-year-old girl nearly lost her left eye in May after a rock was thrown at her family's vehicle as they travelled through Alexandra Hills, on Brisbane's bayside.

It happened in the same suburb where a bus was pelted with a rock in March, leaving a teenage girl with a jagged piece of glass protruding from her arm. The incident prompted a passionate appeal against rock throwing by local police.

"This is not a game, you are putting people's lives at risk and it must stop now," Wynnum Police District Inspector Peter Harding said at the time.

But the challenge to rock throwers did not stop incidents in the area.

A taxi driver told the Bayside Bulletin he feared for his life when rocks bigger than cricket balls were thrown at his car as he travelled under a railway overpass at Birkdale early one morning in July.

Driver Inam Alvi said it was the second time in two months his cab had been targeted. Two 17-year-old males were charged over the incident.

Rock throwers have also been striking fear into taxi and bus drivers interstate.

In June, taxi drivers in the Western Australian Goldfields region revealed they were avoiding self-imposed "no go" zones following a rise in rock-throwing incidents. Some night bus services in the region were also suspended.

Although Queensland Rail could not provide figures yesterday, Rail Back On Track spokesman Robert Dow said he did not think rock-throwing attacks against the region's trains had increased in frequency in the past few years.
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Dean Quick

If caught, the idiots responsible for this latest act of lunacy should receive mandatory gaol sentences as should those caught disregarding the road rules at level crossings.These are acts of a serious nature that endanger peoples lives and therefore the punishment should fit the crime.

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