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Fatal Crash April 18, 2023 crash, updated April 13, 2026 East Conejo near Peach Avenue, Selma, Fresno County, CA

Devastating Train Accident in Fresno County Near Selma Left Two People Dead

Follow-up reporting identified the two people killed when an Amtrak train hit a Nissan Versa southwest of Selma as Danny Shelton, 48, of Fresno and Elizabeth Keeling, 22. Investigators said the car went around lowered crossing arms at East Conejo and Peach Avenue before the train struck it and pushed it roughly 200 feet up the tracks.

Incident Summary

Type
Passenger vehicle versus Amtrak train at active railroad crossing
Location
East Conejo near Peach Avenue, southwest of Selma in Fresno County
Date
April 18, 2023
Time
About 6:00 p.m.
Vehicle
Nissan Versa traveling westbound
Victims
Danny Shelton, 48, and Elizabeth Keeling, 22
Fatalities
2 people died
Train
Amtrak passenger train with about 1,300 passengers, none reported injured
Crossing Status
CHP said the railroad crossing arms were already down
Impact
The train reportedly launched the car about 200 feet up the tracks
Investigation
California Highway Patrol investigation was still open in the latest publicly located follow-up reports
Region
Central Valley / Northern California coverage area

What Happened Near Selma

Initial reports said only that a man and woman were in the Nissan when it was hit by an Amtrak train at East Conejo near Peach Avenue. Later coverage added the names of both victims and a clearer sequence of events. According to ABC30, CHP said the crash happened after the driver went around the lowered railroad crossing arms. FOX26 later identified the victims as Danny Shelton, 48, of Fresno and Elizabeth Keeling, 22, who was taken to Community Regional Medical Center and later died.

Those added details matter because they show this was not described as a case involving an unmarked crossing or a stalled vehicle trapped on the rails. The public reporting instead pointed to an active crossing, with the warning system already engaged, and a violent impact that pushed the car about 200 feet up the tracks. None of the roughly 1,300 passengers on the train were reported injured.

What Follow-Up Reporting Added and What It Did Not

The strongest follow-up fact that surfaced after the original short article was the passenger’s identity. Early reports said only that a woman had been hospitalized. FOX26 later named her as Elizabeth Keeling, 22. That update turned a thin breaking-news post into a clearer record of who was lost in the crash.

At the same time, the public follow-up appears limited. In the reporting located for this rebuild, no later CHP release, civil filing, or agency finding publicly resolved the investigation beyond the initial account that the car went around lowered crossing arms. That is worth stating plainly. When no official finding is publicly available, a responsible article should say so instead of pretending the record is more complete than it is.

Crossing Safety and Fresno County Context

Even without a later public investigative report, one safety point is clear from the earliest news coverage: the warning devices were already active. That places the focus on driver decision-making at a protected crossing, but it does not erase the need to examine timing, visibility, signal performance, sight lines, roadway approach design, and any prior collision history at or near similar crossings in Fresno County.

That broader context matters in the Central Valley, where rural crossings can sit along fast-moving agricultural roads and long, straight approaches that may tempt unsafe choices. Fresno County saw another fatal train collision a year later in nearby Kingsburg, where Reymundo Caldera, 43, died after his SUV collided with a train at Golden State Boulevard and Stroud Avenue. In that 2024 case, ABC30 reported investigators were examining whether the crossing arms were functioning. The contrast between the two cases shows why each rail crash has to be investigated on its own facts instead of reduced to a generic headline.

Legal Issues Families May Face After a Fatal Train Collision

Fatal railroad crossing cases can involve more than one layer of evidence. Families may need to preserve scene photographs, witness accounts, train-event data, crossing signal records, dispatch logs, medical records, and coroner findings before that information becomes harder to obtain. Where questions remain about timing, visibility, or signal performance, those records can become central.

Case Context at a Glance

2 Fatalities
Danny Shelton died at the scene and Elizabeth Keeling later died at the hospital after the Nissan was struck by the train.
ABC30, FOX26 follow-up coverage
1,300 Passengers
ABC30 reported none of the train’s approximately 1,300 passengers were injured in the collision.
ABC30 Fresno
~200 Feet
News coverage said the Amtrak train pushed or launched the Nissan about 200 feet up the tracks, underscoring the force involved in the crash.
ABC30 Fresno

Frequently Asked Questions

Who were the victims in the Fresno County train crash near Selma?
Follow-up reporting identified the driver as Danny Shelton, 48, of Fresno. FOX26 later identified the passenger as Elizabeth Keeling, 22, who was taken to Community Regional Medical Center and later died.
What did CHP say happened at East Conejo and Peach Avenue?
According to news reports quoting CHP, the Nissan Versa went around lowered railroad crossing arms before it was struck by an Amtrak train. The impact pushed the car about 200 feet up the tracks.
Was there a later public finding that fully closed the case?
Not in the follow-up reporting located for this rebuild. The latest public accounts found still described the matter as under CHP investigation, with no later official report identified in the available sources.
What kind of lawyer handles fatal train-crossing cases in California?
These cases are often handled as wrongful death and catastrophic injury matters. Depending on the facts, families may need counsel experienced in wrongful death, major transportation collisions, and evidence preservation involving both public agencies and private operators.

When a Railroad Crossing Crash Takes a Life, the First News Story Is Rarely the Whole Story.

Families often need answers about warning devices, timing, witness accounts, and whether all evidence was preserved. If your family is dealing with a fatal crash in Fresno County or anywhere in California, Scranton Law Firm can help you understand the next step.

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