Washington Gov. Jay Inslee tweeted, "Thank you to the first
responders on the scene. We're praying for everyone on board the
train, and ask everyone to hold them in your thoughts."
"We had just passed the city of DuPont and it seemed like we were
going around a curve," Karnes told CBSN. "And all of a sudden, we
felt this rocking and creaking noise, and then all of a sudden it
felt like we were heading down a hill, and the next thing that we
know, we're being slammed into the front of our seats, and the
windows are breaking, and then we stop, and there's water that's
gushing out of the top of the train, and all the lights go out and
people are screaming."
"There was a lot of dust all over the place, and in order to get
out of the car we had to kick out the window, the emergency window,
because the emergency doors were not functioning," Karnes, who says
he was near the front of the train, later told CBS News in a
Special Report.
"There was a little bit of creaking initially but there wasn't a
whole lot of warning," he added.