Jerusalem - Israel Police’s Traffic Department head Yaron Beeri told a special Knesset session on Tuesday that the bus driver involved in the deadly Highway 1 crash on Sunday was indeed tampering with the vehicle’s tachometer, which record’s the vehicle’s speed, shortly after the crash. “As dead bodies were lying at the scene and the injured were screaming for help, the driver did something to the tachograph. It did not happen on its own,” he said.

Beeri said that “it is completely clear that the driver’s behavior was irregular,” adding that police are in the process of investigating why this was the case.

The police official was speaking at the second of a round of special Economic Affairs Committee sessions focusing on dangerous roadways in the country and preventing crashes. The session’s first meeting last week came the day after a serious crash on Highway 31 killed four people.

Police said that while driving the 402 Egged bus from Jerusalem to Bnei Brak, driver Chaim Biton “left the right lane and began driving on the shoulder and did not notice a disabled truck on the side of the road and struck it with great force.”

Police said that he apparently did notice the truck because he swerved to the left, causing the bus to hit the truck mainly on its rear left side.

The driver of Egged bus nr 402 who was driving the bus from yesterday's lethal car accident killing 6 and seriously wounding several more on Road 1 near Latrun interchange, seen at the Traffic Court in Jerusalem on February 15, 2016. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90The driver of Egged bus nr 402 who was driving the bus from yesterday's lethal car accident killing 6 and seriously wounding several more on Road 1 near Latrun interchange, seen at the Traffic Court in Jerusalem on February 15, 2016. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90

“The bus, fortunately, was not completely full and a large portion of passengers were sitting on the left side of the bus,” he told the committee. Almost all the passengers sitting on the right side of the bus were killed or hurt as a crane mounted on the back of the truck gutted the right side of the bus.

Turning his focus to the danger of smartphones and distractions while driving. Beeri said that “everybody makes mistakes in judgement while driving and we are all busy with our smartphones—this is killing us.” He said that police continue to see crash victims with their phone by their legs, which means they were using their phone at the time of the crash.

“It’s hard to prove a clear cause and effect,” he said, “but there is no doubt that one of the central factors is the use of cellphones while driving and walking.” He said that pedestrians too are “walking themselves to their own deaths.”

Also speaking at the session was Elhanan Erez, the head secretary of Egged, who expressed his deep condolences over the crash. He said that the company has begun performing driver surveillance, especially for new drivers.

Medical and Rescue personnel evacuate wounded and killed passengers from the scene where a bus crashed into a truck pulled over on Road 1 near Latrun interchange, on February 14, 2016. Photo by Flash90Medical and Rescue personnel evacuate wounded and killed passengers from the scene where a bus crashed into a truck pulled over on Road 1 near Latrun interchange, on February 14, 2016. Photo by Flash90