LA couple rescued after car plunges 300 feet into remote California canyon, thanks to iPhone 14's SOS feature
meaww
December 16, 2022
December 16, 2022
After veering off a California highway, going over a cliff, and
plummeting 300 feet before coming to a stop upside down in a lonely
canyon, Cloe Fields and her boyfriend Christian Zelada are lucky to be
alive
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: After veering off a California highway,
going over a cliff, and plummeting 300 feet before coming to a stop
upside down in a remote canyon, Cloe Fields and her boyfriend, Christian
Zelada, are lucky to be alive, thanks to a new iPhone 14 feature.
Zelada stopped the couple's leisurely mountain drive near their Glendale
home so that another vehicle could pass. Their Hyundai Elantra veered off the Angeles Forest Highway and fell backward down a precipice in a matter of seconds.
Their car landed on its roof after falling nearly 300 feet into Monkey Canyon. Fields' iPhone 14
had already used cutting-edge technology to automatically detect the
accident and send an SOS call via satellite to an Apple emergency relay
center, which quickly informed authorities of the emergency and its
site, despite the fact that there was no cell service in the narrow
canyon. Fields discovered the phone about 10 feet from the scene.
Cloe
Fields and Christian Zelada after the crash. “We only had bruises on
our faces, cuts and a little bit of neck pain and, now, a mild
concussion,” Ms. Fields said.
Photos
taken by Ms. Fields showed the aftermath of the crash. She said she
remembered Mr. Zelada’s telling her as the car fell: “We’re OK. We’re
OK. We’re OK.”
"All we could see was trees, dirt, and smoke, and we were hitting trees," Fields, 23, tells People.
"Then we felt the rolling and we were upside down. We looked at each
and checked each other, and all we had were some scratches," Fields
says. "Then my first initial thought was 'Where's my phone?'" Within 30
minutes a helicopter from the Special Enforcement Bureau (SEB) of the
Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's high-risk rescue teams was on
its way to the Canyon.
The team descended tactical medics and used a rope to bring the duo to
safety while the helicopter hovered overhead. Authorities uploaded a
video of the dramatic rescue in the Angeles National Forest to social
media. "I was hyperventilating and crying at the same time," Fields told
the outlet of the time he was being rescued. "They're like, 'You're
okay, you're alive, you're fine. It was so fast that I was like, I can't
believe this happened." The pair was airlifted to Huntington Hospital
in Pasadena where they were treated for minor facial abrasions by
medical professionals. "It felt like you were in a grueling workout,"
Zelada, 24, who also claimed that his entire body was painful shared.
Los
Angeles Sheriff’s Department Air Rescue 5 pictured at one of many rescues
"Vehicle 250 feet over the side, Monkey Canyon, Angeles Forest. Los
Angeles Sheriff’s Department Air Rescue 5 on scene to conduct the
rescue. LASD SEB Tactical Medics deployed and hoisted 2 victims out of
the canyon. Airlifted to a trauma center. Saving lives priority 1,"
Special Enforcement Bureau - LASD posted on Twitter. "Additional video
of Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department Air Rescue 5 conducting a rescue in
Monkey Canyon, Angeles Forest this afternoon. Saving lives priority 1."
2 comments:
I discussed needed a new recliner with my wife yesterday. I awoke to numerous FB adds about recliners today. Smart devices listen and learn.
The robots are listening, and are out to get us. Sometimes, though, they do help. For now.
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