"I note that MI5 has not disputed that disclosure was, at least, contemplated… either there was inadequate record keeping or there has been a failure to make records available to inspectors. Either would represent a serious compliance failure," he said.
The Euston to Glasgow service was running late that night after breaking down in Hertfordshire and the train was more than an hour behind time.As it neared Nuneaton, travelling at about 80 mph, the driver saw a board warning of a 20 mph speed restriction through the station. The safety measure had been brought in for temporary track there which could only sustain top speeds of 40mph.
The lights on the board were out and the driver wrongly assumed that meant the restriction was lifted, with catastrophic results.As the train was about to enter the station shortly before 02:00 BST, the driver saw another warning board which was lit and slammed on the brakes but "it was by then too late", a report into the crash said.The two engines, along with all the sleeper cars, derailed. Coaches slewed sideways, some thrown on to their sides, hitting structures along the line for 340 yards (311m).
The engines split apart and the second one smashed on to a platform.When Mr Winnett arrived he could see the scale of disaster and more fire crews were quickly called to the scene but they struggled to get to survivors.
"We were having to help people get out with crowbars, saws and jacks," Mr Winnett recalled.
"We had a difficult job getting in, train carriages are made of substantial stuff. We didn't have the cutting equipment they have now."When Elon Musk recently announced that he was stepping back from politics, investors hoped that would mean he would step up his involvement in the many tech firms he runs.
His explosive row with President Donald Trump - and the very public airing of his dirty White House laundry - suggests Musk's changing priorities might not quite be the salve they had been hoping for.Instead of Musk retreating somewhat from the public eye and focusing on boosting the fortunes of Tesla and his other enterprises, he now finds himself being threatened with a boycott from one of his main customers - Trump's federal government.
Tesla shares were sent into freefall on Thursday - falling 14% - as he sounded off about President Donald Trump on social media.They rebounded a little on Friday following some indications tempers were cooling.