The Amtrak engineer whose actions led to a horrific 2015 train crash that killed several and injured hundreds turned himself in to police Thursday morning, according to a report.

Brandon Bostian’s attorney brought him to a Philadelphia police station, where cops promptly cuffed him, The Associated Press reported.

Bostian, 34, was at the helm of a Washington-to-New York train that had just pulled out of Philadelphia on May 12, 2015, when he sped into a 50 mph curve at more than 100 mph. The train derailed, killing eight people and injuring 200.

The National Transportation Safety Board concluded last year that the engineer was to blame after he got distracted by radio chatter about a nearby commuter train being struck with a rock.

Instead of slowing down, the engineer accelerated as he approached the curve and quickly lost control.

A Philadelphia Municipal Court judge ordered prosecutors to file charges last week after the local district attorney’s office said it didn’t have enough evidence to prove that Bostian acted with “conscious disregard.”

Amtrak has agreed to pay out $265 million to the crash victims and their families.

The charges against Bostian include causing a catastrophe and involuntary manslaughter.