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Tour bus had poor safety record before fatal crash

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Ramon Ramirez, who is listed in documents as the owner of Scapadas Magicas, lives in Tijuana and rents an apartment in Chula Vista, near San Diego. No one answered the door at the Chula Vista residence, where a small patio was crammed with plastic jugs, empty bottles and other recyclable materials.

Federal transportation records show that the bus involved in the crash has been cited as recently as October, when inspectors found a damaged windshield and noted that there was no properly installed fire extinguisher. In July, they found a faulty axle and brakes. An inspection in May revealed loose or missing wheel fasteners.

The violations helped place Scapadas Magicas below industry norms for safety. More than 75 percent of carriers in the same class have a better safety record, according to the Department of Transportation.

Early Monday, some of the crash victims’ relatives visited the office of InterBus Tours and Charters located in a Tijuana strip mall in an upscale district near restaurant row. They were referred to several U.S. hospitals.

Almost 20 hours after the crash, authorities remained at the scene of the accident, using a 60-ton crane to pluck the stricken bus from where it came to rest.

Once the bus was lifted onto the road and stabilized, emergency crews entered the vehicle and searched it. Investigators initially believed that two bodies had remained amid the wreckage, but found only one dead passenger Monday afternoon. They revised the death toll to seven. The CHP initially estimated eight deaths Sunday night.

All of those killed were bus passengers, according to the CHP.

The San Bernardino County coroner's office released the names of six of those killed: Guadalupe Olivas, 61; Elvira Garcia Jimenez, 40; and Victor Cabrera Garcia, 13, all of San Diego; and Tijuana residents Aleida Adriana Arce Hernandez, 38; Rubicelia Escobedo Flores, 34; and Mario Garcia Santoyo, 32.

The dozens of injured were transported to at least four local hospitals. Some suffered minor injuries and had been released by Monday morning. Two passengers, including a child, remained in critical condition and a third in serious condition at Loma Linda University Medical Center, hospital spokesman Herbert Atienza said.

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