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Bus falls off of highway bridge, killing all aboard
Fictitious newswire agency, Dec XX, 20XX

Buses are an important form of transportation, both here in America and elsewhere, and they transport busloads of people every day. Everybody hopes to arrive safely at their destinations on their buses, but this hope was dashed for the 60+ people aboard a Fictitious Transport Company bus, who died when their bus plunged from a bridge in Billsontown on Monday for a reason that is as of now unknown.

The bus was travelling down a highway at night when it suddenly turned right, crashing through the fencing on the bridge it was driving on, and plunged into the cold water below.

Pete Townsbuilt, spokesperson of the Billsontown Metropolitan Police, said the police will be "actively investigating the cause of the plunge," and adds that the possibility that the plummetting of the bus was caused intentionally "cannot yet be ruled out." Townsbuilt said that according to current evidence, the bus crash "was most likely caused by operator error."

Xingwen Zhao told the FNA that he was driving behind the bus when it "swerved all over the road, perhaps because it was driving too fast when the road was covered with all the moisture on the ground from yesterday's rainstorm."

"The bus veered left, and the driver appeared to have overcorrected the veering by turning right by too much," Zhao said.

Although officials said that only 60 people were aboard the bus, a paramedic who spoke with the FNA under the condition of anonymity told them that "at least 100 bodies, exceeding the bus' intended capacity, were dragged out from the water."

The paramedic, who asked to be identified as "Joe", said that one man was dragged out alive, but "we received an order to dump him into the ocean."

In a press release issued today, the Fictitious Transport Company's spokeswoman Joanne Richardson said that the company would be "transparent during the investigations."

However, a member of the FTC worker's union, who asked to remain anonymous, emailed Editanews, writing that the company "had no transparency at all, and frequently overloaded the buses."

The bus plunge happened amid job actions from the workers' union and a lockout from the FTC over company policy that union workers say practically forbade bus drivers from sleeping for any more than 3 hours per day.