FOREST PARK, Ill. — FOREST PARK, Ill. (AP) — The federal investigation into the crash of an unmanned Chicago commuter train is continuing, but the government shutdown has meant there’s nobody around to talk about it.

Tim DePaepe of the National Transportation Safety Board said Monday that once the agency’s investigators are on a scene they are considered “essential” and would not be furloughed as part of the government shutdown that began at midnight.

But callers to the NTSB public affairs office Tuesday were told by a recording that “due to lapse in funding” the office is closed.

Investigators are trying to determine how the out-of-service train rolled about a half mile before crashing into an occupied train. As many as 48 people had minor injuries.

The accident happened in Forest Park on the Chicago Transit Authority’s blue line.