BALTIMORE (AP) - The Latest on a crash involving a school bus and a commuter bus that killed both drivers and four mass transit riders in Baltimore (all times local):

4:50 p.m.

An accident report shows the driver of the school bus that crashed in Baltimore this week, killing six people including himself, may have lost consciousness during an earlier crash two years ago.

According to the report released to The Associated Press on Friday, police in suburban Howard County said Glenn Chappell's spouse told them at the time that he took medication for seizures.

The accident report from Feb. 9, 2014, says Chappell was driving in Ellicott City around 9 a.m. when he apparently "suffered a medical condition" and lost consciousness and/or control of the car.

The report says the vehicle crossed a concrete median and oncoming traffic, eventually striking a guardrail. It then continued on a pedestrian sidewalk before coming to a rest after striking some trees and shrubbery.

It says Chappell was taken to a hospital with no apparent physical injuries.

Authorities have declined to answer specific questions about Chappell's health history but say they are looking at it as part of the investigation.

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1:30 p.m.

The National Transportation Safety Board says investigators have found no mechanical defects in the two buses involved in this week's fatal crash in Baltimore.

Jennifer Morrison is the NTSB's lead investigator at the scene. Morrison said at a news conference Friday afternoon that the agency has completed the mechanical inspections of both the commuter bus and school bus and found no deficiencies.

Morrison also says the NTSB and Baltimore police have obtained four surveillance videos that show the school bus on its approach to the crash site. But she says none shows the collision. The bus hit a car before colliding with a Maryland Transit Administration bus early Tuesday morning, killing six people, including both bus drivers.

Police spokesman T.J. Smith says it appears from the surveillance video that the bus was traveling at a..read more at WBAL