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Tesla goes over cliff along Pacific Coastal Highway near Devil’s Slide

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In what Northern California first responders are calling a miracle, four people survived an incredible single-vehicle crash after a Tesla dove off a cliff along the Pacific Coast Highway Monday morning.

A 4-year-old girl, a 9-year-old boy and two adults suffered serious injuries after the sedan they were riding in plunged hundreds of feet off a cliff along State Route 1 near Devil’s Slide – an area known for fatal wrecks, officials with Coastside Fire Protection District/Cal Fire reported.

The vehicle apparently flipped a few times before landing on its wheels, wedged against the cliff just feet from the surf,  Brian Pottenger, a battalion chief with the agency, said at the scene.

On Monday afternoon, Cal Fire San Mateo’s Santa Cruz Unit shared a video letting drivers in the area know that the car went over the cliff and there would be delays along the coastal roadway.

The victims were initially listed in critical condition but all four were conscious and alert when rescuers arrived.

The Tesla plummeted more than 250 feet from the highway and crashed into a rocky outcropping, officials said. Pottenger said the vehicle flipped several times before landing on its wheels, wedged against the cliff just feet from the surf.

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Neither CAL Fire nor the California Highway Patrol (CHP) could immediately be reached for comment by USA TODAY Tuesday morning for an update on the victims’ conditions.

Officials did not provide the victims’ names or say where they are from.

Crashes along Devil’s Slide, a steep, rocky and winding coastal area about 20 miles  south of San Francisco between Pacifica and Montara, rarely end with survivors.

“We go there all the time for cars over the cliff and they never live. This was an absolute miracle,” Pottenger said.

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Watching through binoculars

Pottenger said witnesses called 911 at 10:15 a.m. and responding crews set up rope system from the highway to lower firefighters down the cliff.

At the same time, he said, other firefighters watching the sedan through binoculars suddenly noticed movement – a sign that at least one person was still alive.

“Every one of us was shocked when we saw movement out of the front windshield,” Pottenger said.

The incident turned from what had been likely a recovery of bodies to a rescue operation that took several hours amid constant rain, heavy winds, slick roads and crashing waves. The doors were smashed against the cliff and jammed shut, so firefighters were forced to cut the victims out of the car using the so-called “jaws of life” tools.

Crews pulled the two children out of the Tesla’s back window and brought them up the cliff in a basket using a rope. They were rushed to the hospital by ambulance to be treated for musculoskeletal injuries, officials reported.

Based on the CHP’s initial investigation, troopers do not believe the Tesla was operating in Autopilot or Full Self-Driving mode at the time, Officer Mark Andrews said.

The road’s conditions were also not believed to be a factor in the crash. There was no guardrail at the spot where the sedan went off the cliff.

“The car traveled off the main portion of the roadway. For what reason, we don’t know,” Andrews said.

Contributing: Associated Press

Natalie Neysa Alund covers trending news for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@usatoday.com and follow her on Twitter @nataliealund.



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