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They rescue a woman who floated two days in a lake on an inflatable mattress

2022-02-09T14:00:03.505Z


A woman spent 2 days floating alone on an inflatable mattress on a frozen lake in the US A pair of freight train workers came to her rescue.


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(CNN) --

A woman spent two days floating alone on an inflatable mattress on a frozen lake.

A pair of freight train workers came to her rescue on Thursday.

Driver Cristhian Sosa told CNN Monday that the southbound BNSF train was headed to Irving, Texas, from Madill, Oklahoma, in the afternoon.

It was then that Sosa and the train driver, Justin Luster, became aware of their presence.

The woman was stranded on rocks by Lake Texoma, a large reservoir on the Oklahoma-Texas border about 85 miles north of Dallas.

According to the two men, the woman was waving her arms and screaming for help.

They stopped the train and Sosa said he approached the woman.

The woman, who told Sosa her name was Connie, had cuts on her hands and was bleeding.

"She was wet, confused and didn't remember the time," Sosa told CNN.

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"He was in the early stages of hypothermia or already had it," Sosa added.

Temperatures were below freezing and it was snowing lightly, she said.

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Connie told the crew that she had been floating on an inflatable mattress for days after trying to use it as a raft to reach a boat on the other side of the lake, according to Sosa.

Connie's fiancé had been with her at first, Sosa said, and the couple had initially gone into the water to retrieve items that had fallen from that boat.

Connie told Sosa that she broke up with her fiancé -- who was using a different flotation device -- before.

It then floated for two miles across the lake, stopping when it ran into what Sosa described as a dam, he said.

She climbed up and sat on the rocks, and that's where the members of the train saw her.

"It was unexpected," Luster told CNN affiliate KXII.

"With the weather we were having we were the only train that was there at the time...and I'm glad we could be there when we were."

Connie's fiancé eventually made it to shore, wet and frozen, and went to a nearby house to get help, according to the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.

The man told the highway patrol that his partner had been dragged away a day earlier, police said.

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Police received her fiancé's call about the missing woman an hour before the train crew called.

The woman was not seen when they first responded to the call, the patrol's director of media operations, Sarah Stewart, told CNN.

Highway Patrol officers arrived at the scene about 15 minutes after the train crew's call.

Connie was rushed by EMS to hospital, and the Highway Patrol said she is expected to survive.

No information is available about her fiancé.

Sosa told CNN that he is glad Connie is safe and hopes her recovery continues to be good.

"I'm glad I was with Mr. Luster and that the two of us together were able to help her," she said.

The Highway Patrol said that since no crime was committed, they are not conducting an official investigation.

LakeRescue

Source: cnnespanol

All news articles on 2022-02-09

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