Current:Home > FinanceiPhone helps California responders find man who drove off 400-foot cliff, ejected from car-InfoLens
iPhone helps California responders find man who drove off 400-foot cliff, ejected from car
View Date:2025-01-11 05:30:30
California first responders rescued a man who drove off a 400-foot cliff and was ejected from his vehicle Friday after they received a crash alert sent by his phone, rescuers said.
The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department search and rescue team responded to a crash at the Angeles National Forest after receiving an iPhone Crash Detection alert, which is designed to recognize severe vehicle crashes, around 11 p.m. PST, group leader Mike Leum told USA TODAY.
“Without that timely notification of the iPhone Crash Detection, nobody witnessed him going over, who knows if he ever would have been found.” Leum said. “He most likely would have bled out in a matter of an hour or so.”
The team was able to quickly locate the driver, whose name was not immediately released, using the phone’s GPS location, Leum said. When responders arrived, they could hear the man’s voice, but they didn’t know exactly where he was.
Responders called in a helicopter unit to find the man, but due to “heavy tree canopy” the unit was not able to see the crash site, Leum said.
Responders locate driver who was bleeding from his head
After searching the roadway, the team found tire marks, a dent in a guardrail, damaged trees and debris on the road, Leum said. This led them to believe the man was directly below the area.
Leum and a trainee went down the cliff and located the driver, who was laying in front of the car 400 feet down, Leum said.
“He had an active bleed going on from his head,” Leum said. “Usually when we have cars that go off that road, it’s usually not survivable.”
“The fact that he had no broken bones means he was not ejected during the fall," Leum added, noting the man was thrown out when the car hit the bottom.
Responders called back the helicopter unit, who took the man to a local hospital, Leum said.
How Crash Detection on iPhone works
Crash Detection is available on iPhone 14 or iPhone 14 pro models and several Apple Watch models including the Apple Watch Series 8, Apple Watch SE (2nd generation) and Apple Watch Ultra with the latest version of watchOS. If you’re in a severe car crash, the devices will display this message – "It looks like you've been in a crash" – and will call emergency services if you don’t dismiss the message after 20-seconds, according to Apple.
"Crash Detection is designed to detect severe car crashes – such as front-impact, side-impact, and rear-end collisions, and rollovers – involving sedans, minivans, SUVs, pickup trucks and other passenger cars," Apple said on its website.
Your iPhone will also text the 911 center your last known coordinates.
A similar feature is also available for Android users on some Google phones. According to Pixel Phone Help, Pixel 3, 4, and later phones can use "your phone's location, motion sensors, and nearby sounds" to detect a possible serious crash. It does require permission to track location, physical activity, and microphone to work. "If your phone detects a car crash, it can call emergency services for you."
Detection features on iPhones aren't perfect
There have been instances where these detection tools on iPhones might think you're in danger when you're not.
In October 2022, a woman was riding a roller coaster at an amusement park in Cincinnati when she checked her phone after the ride and noticed her iPhone 14 Pro had contacted an emergency dispatcher due to the crash detection function, according to a Wall Street Journal report.
And a 2020 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association found another health feature, Apple Watch's abnormal pulse detection, was falsely sending people to emergency rooms.
Crash Detection:iPhone 14's new Crash Detection reportedly kicks in if you're on a roller coaster
veryGood! (1678)
Related
- Duke basketball vs Kentucky live updates: Highlights, scores, updates from Champions Classic
- Idaho mom Lori Vallow Daybell faces sentencing in deaths of 2 children and her romantic rival
- Britney Spears' Mother-in-Law Hospitalized After Major Accident
- Water stuck in your ear? How to get rid of this summer nuisance.
- Horoscopes Today, November 11, 2024
- This man owns 300 perfect, vintage, in-box Barbies. This is the story of how it happened
- Cougar attacks 8-year-old, leading to closures in Washington’s Olympic National Park
- S.C. nurse who fatally poisoned husband with eye drops: I just wanted him to suffer
- Biden funded new factories and infrastructure projects, but Trump might get to cut the ribbons
- Who’s in, who’s out: A look at which candidates have qualified for the 1st GOP presidential debate
Ranking
- Sports are a must-have for many girls who grow up to be leaders
- Lori Vallow Daybell sentencing live stream: Idaho woman facing prison for murders of her children
- This man owns 300 perfect, vintage, in-box Barbies. This is the story of how it happened
- Pennsylvania governor says millions will go to help train workers for infrastructure projects
- Georgia lawmaker proposes new gun safety policies after school shooting
- As work begins on the largest US dam removal project, tribes look to a future of growth
- New Jersey’s acting governor taken to hospital for undisclosed medical care
- RFK Jr. says he’s not anti-vaccine. His record shows the opposite. It’s one of many inconsistencies
Recommendation
-
Gerry Faust, the former head football coach at Notre Dame, has died at 89
-
Florida woman partially bites other woman's ear off after fight breaks out at house party, officials say
-
Girl, 6, is latest child to die or be injured from boating accidents this summer across US
-
Leanne Morgan, the 'Mrs. Maisel of Appalachia,' jokes about motherhood and menopause
-
NYC bans unusual practice of forcing tenants to pay real estate brokers hired by landlords
-
Biden has decided to keep Space Command in Colorado, rejecting move to Alabama, officials tell AP
-
3 dead after small plane crashes into hangar at Southern California airport
-
Inside the large-scale US-Australia exercise