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Lauren Weinberg, Stranded Arizona College Student Released From Hospital

By FELICIA FONSECA and SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN   12/22/11 07:30 PM ET   AP

Lauren Weinberg

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. -- A college student was released from the hospital Thursday after surviving what she said was a nine-day ordeal of being stuck in her car in the snow with no heavy coat, blankets or gloves and only two candy bars for food.

Authorities are still not clear about why 23-year-old Lauren Weinberg drove to the desolate mountain area of Arizona during finals week at Arizona State University before she was rescued Wednesday.

She was less than a mile from a ranch and in an area that had cell phone service. She told authorities her phone wasn't working, and her car could not be seen from the ranch, where workers plowed through 10 inches of snow to get her out.

Authorities and the U.S. Forest Service workers who found Weinberg said they had no reason to doubt her story of survival amid 2 feet of snow and temperatures that plunged to near zero. One of the people who rescued her said he could see floor mats draped over Weinberg's legs while she sat in her car, which still had gas.

"You can say survival skills or a miracle, either way," Phoenix police Officer James Holmes, whose agency was investigating her disappearance. "But the good thing is she's home and safe."

It was one of two snow rescues in the Southwest on Wednesday. A Texas family found themselves struggling to breathe after nearly two days in their SUV after it was buried under 4 feet of snow and ice on a rural New Mexico highway.

Two Forest Service employees on snowmobiles found Weinberg about 45 miles southeast of Winslow while checking gates on forest roads. One of them had checked the same gate the morning of Dec. 12 – the day Weinberg said she became stranded and a day after she was last seen at her mother's home in Phoenix – but didn't spot anything.

Weinberg had the two candy bars with her and later told a deputy that she put snow in a water bottle and placed it atop the sedan to melt it for drinking water.

She had been driving with no specific destination, traveling south from Winslow toward the Mogollon Rim – a prominent line of cliffs that divides the state's high country from the desert, Coconino County sheriff's spokesman Gerry Blair said. The area is frequented mostly by firewood gatherers, hunters and local ranchers.

After the paved road turned into a dirt road, Weinberg stopped at a fence line to move a gate and her vehicle got stuck in the snow, Blair said.

Forest Service worker Bob McDonald said he called out to see if anyone was around the vehicle, and Weinberg opened the back door, looking surprised and relieved.

Gary Strickland, who was trailing McDonald on a second snowmobile, gave Weinberg his fleece jacket and she consumed a packaged lunch, bag of chips and water they had given her. Weinberg used Strickland's cell phone to call family, picking up on a signal from the cell phone tower on the private ranch about a half-mile up the road.

"I could not even begin to predict how she could (survive), but I have no reason not to believe her story," said McDonald. "As a parent myself, missing a child for nine days and not knowing where they are, it was extremely fortunate."

Other than being cold, hungry and thirsty, she was in good condition, lucid and speaking coherently, Blair said.

Holmes said the family wants to enjoy Weinberg's return and was not immediately interested in speaking with reporters. Police said Weinberg missed her final exams while she was stranded. After she was reported missing, they managed to track her through purchases at convenience stores before the trail went cold.

"I am so thankful to be alive and warm," Weinberg said in a statement late Wednesday. "Thank you everyone for your thoughts and prayers, because they worked. There were times I was afraid but mostly I had faith I would be found."

One member of the Texas family found in New Mexico, Yvonne Higgins, remained hospitalized with pneumonia Thursday. Her husband, David Higgins, and his father were on their way to pick up the family's vehicle after it was pulled by rescuers from the snowdrift near Springer, N.M. The family plans to return to Texas when his wife is released from the hospital, though it was unclear when that might be.

Rescuers had to dig through snow and ice to free the Higgins family, who left their home near League City, Texas, on Sunday for a ski trip in northern New Mexico. The couple and their 5-year-old daughter, Hannah, were clinging to each other and were lethargic early Wednesday.

David Higgins was able to keep the car running for a couple of hours, but when he wanted to clear the exhaust pipe, his door was blocked. He tried to shove his arm through the top of the window, but it went about 16 inches and still was covered in snow.

The family had plenty of water, sandwiches, chips and snack mix. But as the hours passed, it seemed as if they were working harder to breathe inside the buried SUV.

"We weren't sure of it, but we think we were running out of air. That was spooky," the 48-year-old father told The Associated Press.

He eventually reached his brother in Texas by cellphone and the distress call was relayed to state police, who launched a search Tuesday evening.

Higgins had a simple message for travelers this winter: Throw a case of water and a sleeping bag in the car.

"It will be there if you need it," he said.

___

Susan Montoya Bryan reported from Albuquerque, N.M.

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03:39 PM on 12/25/2011
Story seems kind of fishy to me...(hope I am wrong...but now a days its really hard to tell a true story from a fake)
06:10 PM on 12/24/2011
There is still something not right with this story....either she has a screw loose ....kinda of like the runaway bride story from a few years ago......or she ain't being honest....maybe she was failing her subject or wasn't ready for her final and she staged this to get the pity factor....this whole story stinks....
04:50 PM on 12/24/2011
What a Joke She was there on Purpose and her excuses don't Hold water. She should be Charged for any expenses that were incured finding her.
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Goldie Treasure
Sweet smart aleck,24,proud to be child free
04:42 PM on 12/24/2011
Oh please she could have come up with a better story than this, I guess next time I have to take finals I'll wander into some woods and get trapped under a mysteriously heavy pile of leaves and I'll incredibly survive a week(or however long finals last) on a slim jim and i'll catch rain water in my mouth using a straw.
08:46 PM on 12/24/2011
The forest service closes the gates on those roads for good reason. Because they are not easy as pie to drive on in the winter. It's worrisome that so many people think the opposite. It's that kind of thinking that gets people stuck and stranded.
04:31 PM on 12/24/2011
"Survival skills saved her"??? If she had any, she would not have driven off road in the snow, not knowing where she was going...Some people grow up in a world were it's tip toe through the tulips....never knowing how close death can be with a wrong step.
04:15 PM on 12/24/2011
She was running away from her exams and got really screwed up. She is a LIAR.
fd909
Laugh a little!
03:52 PM on 12/24/2011
"Oh my gosh...I'm in less than a foot of snow! I'll just sit here and either die or get found alive" Great survival instincts, girl. Sorry to be so cynical, but this is a non-story to me.
03:09 PM on 12/24/2011
You can live for weeks on just water. She must have rationed that candybar. Hoorah for candybars!
02:27 PM on 12/24/2011
Deja Vous. I can remember a friend and a brother being stranded in a duck blind, about this time of year, and me having to go to some teachers of theirs and explaining why they missed their final exams. It sounds like this poor girl might have suffered the same fate. Hope she remembers the story when the teacher says she (or he) hopes they are not suffering from their bad experience later the next semester. Nixon and Bronson, Chapel Hill, Christmas 1970. Their boat had come untied and drifted off. Cough, cough.
02:13 PM on 12/24/2011
This story is typical "human interest" newspaper BS. Besides the fact that it is super suspicious why she drove out to nowhere, during a blizzard (Arizona blizzard = more than 5"), she wasn't in the peaks of the northern Rockies for Christ's sake. At the junction of Forest Service Road 100 & 34 where she was found, the Dec/Jan low is 28 degrees F, the average is 40F, and the high is 55F. And it's really sunny. She could take her jacket off during the day. I'm perplexed why no reporters dug in and found out what the hell she was doing......
05:58 PM on 12/24/2011
Actually, another article I read mentions that the daytime temps in Heber, a town 20 miles away from where she was found, were in the "mid-to-low 30s" over that time period. She was on an unplowed, unpaved forest road after a winter storm. It's not hard for me to believe that she actually got stuck. Especially, since my parents live in a wilderness area where they have to deal with unplowed, unpaved forest roads on a regular basis in the winter. They have to use a snowmobile in the winter to get around because they have to park their truck a few miles away from their home.
06:12 PM on 12/24/2011
why did no one see her tire tracks on this un paved road.....easy to see someone going in and not coming out...
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Tony Twohill
05:24 PM on 12/25/2011
In Illinois we call a winter day like that "nearly spring time."
01:02 PM on 12/24/2011
Many college students who attend ASU from out-of-state think that the whole of Arizona has a relatively warm climate. Yet many months of the year you can go less than an hour drive north of Phoenix/Tempe/Scottsdale where temps are in the 60's or 70's and be in snow and freezing temperatures. This student just didn't realize how diverse the state really is, and she was unprepared.
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knice1
12:38 PM on 12/24/2011
lol that's stuck in 10inches is funny. And she had gas, which means at anytime she could had turned on the heater. What a joke. This is certainly no miracle.
03:46 PM on 12/24/2011
they should teach common sense at her school.
11:36 AM on 12/24/2011
"...where workers plowed through 10 inches of snow to get her out...Authorities and the U.S. Forest Service workers who found Weinberg said they had no reason to doubt her story of survival amid 2 feet of snow and temperatures that plunged to near zero."


You've GOT to be kidding! Thats a typical daily commute to work here in Vermont. I guess the "Weather Pansie Factor" increases exponentially south of the Mason-Dixon.
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fallinofficer971
Fugitive Recovery & Extradition
12:05 PM on 12/24/2011
@TheBugHouse...You are Exactly right...Heavy snow fall in the North East isn't a big deal, it happens all the time....But, now in South West..but that wouldn't be any different if during the Summer...let Vermont have a week of temmperatures of 105 degrees and they'll be talking about it like it's a big deal and some body in Arizona will be saying...You've GOT to be kidding me,105 degrees that's a typical daily commute here in...
12:42 PM on 12/24/2011
Riiight, that was my attempt at humor. However, doesn't that part of AZ, at those elevations routinely receive fairly heavy snowfall?
12:44 PM on 12/24/2011
And in all fairness, we'll usually get one or two heatwaves (100°F+) annually, and you'll hear it mentioned on the weather report with some raised eyebrows but its not going to be a widespread problematic issue.
dpaustex
Vote Republican - it's easier than thinking.
11:30 AM on 12/24/2011
Glad all of these folks are well. But it begs the question on the lack of common sense people exhibit.

"Stuck his arm out the window and still hit snow"? Are you kidding me? Try climbing out the window, dummy, then move the snow with - egads - your hands.

Anyone traveling in the winter without some basic common sense, like having proper clothing in case you run off the road, having water, having food, having a sleeping bag, etc., really makes me wonder how people can be so stupid. Yes, stupid.

If you're traveling "back roads", better only go during the day, and you better have a shovel. Might actually be a good idea to know how to use a shovel. But everyone thinking a cell-phone is a survival tool is just beyond stupid.

I'll give them credit for one thing, they did stay with the vehicle (the smart thing to do). But you actually have to get out of the vehicle to help get yourself found.
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fallinofficer971
Fugitive Recovery & Extradition
12:39 PM on 12/24/2011
@dpaustex...You couldn't have said it any better. You could have even added in a portable...CB radio...to your survival list even though they're out dated...but it's like you said, people now a days live by their cell phones...
07:25 PM on 12/24/2011
The college student would have been stupid had she not planned this. I truly believe she did. The family lost in NM had most everything they needed to survive. Except enough air. And about the dad's arm out the window? Read the article again. He tried to get the door open but couldn't because of the amount of snow. He tried to see what he could do by putting his arm out the TOP of the window (I'm guessing because the snow would have come into the car.) but had no luck. They reached help with their cell phone and rescue got to them in 2 days. I hope you find a photo somewhere online that shows how covered their car was. We've had horrible snow storms here recently that CLOSED two major freeway systems. It's no wonder the family found themselves trapped. Their preparedness got them saved, even though they couldn't get out of the car.
10:35 AM on 12/24/2011
Probably went somewhere to get high and bang a boyfriend. Elaborate coverup. If not, a true idiot who didn't know safety was a mile away. Maybe she forgot how to step on the gas. Can't wait for this moron to join the workforce. Maybe she can be a candy striper.