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A couple’s car fell 300 feet. A new iPhone feature aided their rescue.
"Cloe Fields and Christian Zelada were in shock after climbing out of their Hyundai Elantra that, moments earlier, was about 300 feet higher on the Angeles Crest Highway. After pulling over to let another vehicle pass last week, their car had slipped on some gravel, sending them on a terrifying free fall. As they looked around the canyon they’d landed in — both shaken up but not seriously injured — all they could think about was how to get help in a remote area with no cellphone service.
But when Zelada located Fields’s shattered iPhone 14 in the dirt, they learned their rescue had already begun. A new Apple feature had detected the crash and alerted emergency services.
When Zelada found Fields’s phone about 10 yards from the crash site, Fields said her screen read, “It looks like you’ve been in a crash,” with the option to swipe to conduct an emergency call. Emergency SOS that can connect via satellite comes standard with the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Pro, per Apple’s website.
The technology enabled Fields to alert local emergency services. After dispatching a helicopter from roughly 18 miles away, the rescue team located Fields and Zelada a half-hour later. Even as she was being hoisted to safety, Fields said she struggled to remain calm, until she heard the reassuring words of a firefighter reminding her: “You’re alive.””
"Cloe Fields and Christian Zelada were in shock after climbing out of their Hyundai Elantra that, moments earlier, was about 300 feet higher on the Angeles Crest Highway. After pulling over to let another vehicle pass last week, their car had slipped on some gravel, sending them on a terrifying free fall. As they looked around the canyon they’d landed in — both shaken up but not seriously injured — all they could think about was how to get help in a remote area with no cellphone service.
But when Zelada located Fields’s shattered iPhone 14 in the dirt, they learned their rescue had already begun. A new Apple feature had detected the crash and alerted emergency services.
When Zelada found Fields’s phone about 10 yards from the crash site, Fields said her screen read, “It looks like you’ve been in a crash,” with the option to swipe to conduct an emergency call. Emergency SOS that can connect via satellite comes standard with the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Pro, per Apple’s website.
The technology enabled Fields to alert local emergency services. After dispatching a helicopter from roughly 18 miles away, the rescue team located Fields and Zelada a half-hour later. Even as she was being hoisted to safety, Fields said she struggled to remain calm, until she heard the reassuring words of a firefighter reminding her: “You’re alive.””