The driver wasn’t sure how long he’d been trapped, Garcia and De La Torre said, and he was suffering from multiple visible injuries, including a broken hand.
"He just mentioned he couldn't feel his extremities," Garcia said.
Fifield said that investigators were still trying to determine the driver's identity but that he appeared to be a man in his late 20s from the South Bend area.
He may have been at the site for nearly a week undetected because the area is out of view of the interstate, Fifield said.
"I looked over the bridge, and you can't see it," Fifield said, adding that no accident reports had been fielded in the area in recent days.
After Garcia and De La Torre spotted the wreckage and walked toward it to get a better look, they weren't completely sure about what they saw.
"You could barely tell what it was," Garcia said. "It was mangled completely."
"I looked over the bridge, and you can't see it," Fifield said, adding that no accident reports had been fielded in the area in recent days.
After Garcia and De La Torre spotted the wreckage and walked toward it to get a better look, they weren't completely sure about what they saw.
"You could barely tell what it was," Garcia said. "It was mangled completely."
Rescuers from the Portage and Burns Harbor fire departments took a few hours to free the man, Fifield said, because the wreckage was perilous and the location was difficult.
He was lucky. In Brazil once a guy crashed during the night and the car (and body) were found SIX YEARS later. It was identified by DNA as there was not much of the body left.
ReplyDeleteHe was also lucky that the weather has been warmer than normal in the midwest this December.
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