Police Reports

Victim’s I-Phone tells police about car crash

The Apple I-Phone belonging to a weekend crash victim notified police when the car left the road and crashed into the trees. Police say the phone’s owner and car driver died in the crash.  

At 2:30 AM Saturday September 14, Vermont State Police St. Albans Barracks was notified via Apple Crash Detection of a motor vehicle crash in the area of Highgate Rd near Bushey Road in Swanton. 

Missisquoi Valley Rescue and the Swanton Fire Department also responded to the scene. The Subaru Forester was found at a position of rest off the roadway into trees. 

The operator, age 26, who was not wearing a seat belt, was found dead at the scene. The victim’s has not been released. 

According to the Apple website, if an iPhone 14 or later (any model) detects a severe car crash, it can help connect to emergency services and notify the owner’s emergency contacts.

When an iPhone detects a severe car crash, it will display an alert and will automatically initiate an emergency phone call after 20 seconds unless cancelled. If the owner is unresponsive, it will play an audio message for emergency services, which informs them of a severe crash and gives them latitudinal and longitudinal coordinates with an approximate search radius.


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Categories: Police Reports

3 replies »

  1. I wonder if it also will send a notice of the operator traveling 60 MPH in a 55 MPH zone? Reporting texting while driving should be elementary for Apple.

  2. And they get you to accept Big Brother’s spy tools this way… you can call yourselves frogs only so long as you croak… when you are boiled to perfection, you are dead… and AI loves that… remember Chris Hastings, the former Vermonter reporter whose car all of a sudden took off and piled into a light pole in LA back when the Hillary-ites didn’t want him to report on them…
    Simply making the choice to buy a car without the spy means buying a car at least 10 years or older… but do it. And get rid of your location apps, you health beat apps, your bluetooth, and well… yr cell phone…
    You get what you accept.
    I drive a car that is over 200k miles, is twenty years old. It hasn’t killed me yet.