Exclusive: Bus driver watched TV on phone during DC to NYC trip, passenger says

The driver of a bus from Washington to New York was watching TV on his phone during the trip, according to video provided by a passenger (WTOP)
The driver of a bus from Washington to New York was watching TV on his phone during the trip, according to video provided by a passenger (WTOP)
The driver's Samsung phone is mounted near his left knee. (Photo provided to WTOP)
The driver’s Samsung phone is mounted near his left knee. (Photo provided to WTOP)
The passenger videotaped the driver shifting his gaze from the road to the program on his phone (Photo provided to WTOP)
The passenger videotaped the driver shifting his gaze from the road to the program on his phone (Photo provided to WTOP)
(Photo provided to WTOP)
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The driver of a bus from Washington to New York was watching TV on his phone during the trip, according to video provided by a passenger (WTOP)
The driver's Samsung phone is mounted near his left knee. (Photo provided to WTOP)
The passenger videotaped the driver shifting his gaze from the road to the program on his phone (Photo provided to WTOP)

WASHINGTON — Watching TV on a smartphone can pass the time during a long bus trip from the Washington area to New York City, but a local passenger was horrified to realize the driver of his bus was paying attention to the television program when he should have been keeping his eyes on Interstate 95.

A local businessman provided WTOP with video of the driver of his bus watching a program on his phone during a Thursday morning trip from Bethesda, Maryland to New York City.

The Tripper Bus , which left Bethesda at approximately 7 a.m. arrived safely in Manhattan before noon, but the passenger was shaken.

“I was thinking ‘WTF is this guy doing?’ said the passenger, in an email. “Why would he take such a risk? Does he value his life and the lives of the others on this bus?”

From the front passenger seat of the new bus, which had fewer than a dozen passengers on board, the rider recorded the driver’s actions, and forwarded the tape and photos to WTOP.

The driver had mounted a Samsung phone near his left knee, below a tablet containing mapping software.

During the trip up I-95 the video shows the driver repeatedly shifting his eyes from the traffic in front of him toward the TV program.

“I was scared, very scared,” said the passenger. “I couldn’t take my eyes off the road, I couldn’t relax, or sleep, or work.”

The passenger said he was reluctant to confront the driver, in fear of angering him. The passenger asked not to be identified in this story out of fear of retaliation.

The video he provided contains audio from a podcast he was listening to, while videotaping the driver’s actions.

When shown the video by WTOP, the driver’s boss was furious to witness the distracted driving.

“I tell these guys all the time, put the phone down,” said Martin Gunther, owner of Gunther Charters & Hunt Valley Motor Coach . “It’s like they’re addicted to it.”

Gunther said his company owns and operates buses for several low-fare carriers which don’t have their own buses, including Tripper.

Soon after seeing the videotape, Gunther spoke with the driver by phone.

“I talked to him. I said put that phone away, and I’ll talk with you when you get back,” Gunther said.

Online records from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration shows Gunther Charthers, Inc., of Hanover, Maryland, has a satisfactory safety rating, and its drivers perform well-above-average in on-road performance, according to the FMCSA.

“Safety is everything to me. I’m glad nobody was hurt,” said Gunther.

When contacted by WTOP Thursday midday, Gunther said he had hired the driver who was videotaped, and that he was one of his company’s better drivers.

Friday morning, Gunther fired the driver, citing the company’s zero tolerance policy for unsafe driving practices.

After his day of meetings in New York City, the bus passenger opted for a different, more expensive mode of travel for his return trip.

“Greetings from the (Amtrak) Acela,” he wrote. “The Acela ticket was $245, the bus was $31 each way.”

Regardless, the passenger said he won’t ride Tripper Bus again.

“Never, ever,” he said. “I have a wife and two kids — it’s not worth the risk.”

Neal Augenstein

Neal Augenstein has been a reporter at WTOP since 1997. Through the years, Neal has covered many of the crimes and trials that have gripped the region. Neal's been pleased to receive awards over the years for hard news, feature reporting, use of sound and sports.

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