The condition of Lily Groesbeck was upgraded from critical to stable but critical condition at a Salt Lake City hospital, but her 25-year-old mother, Lynn Groesbeck of Springville, was found dead in the car, police said yesterday.
"She is doing remarkably well considering the circumstance. The doctors have been hopeful so far," the mother's sister, Jill Sanderson, told KSL-TV of Salt Lake City yesterday. "We would like to express our appreciation to the Spanish Fork rescue team for saving the baby's life."
Investigators believe the wreck occurred about 10:30 pm Friday when a resident near the accident scene reported hearing a noise, Johnson said. The resident was unable to find anything unusual when checking the area near Provo.
The girl was found hanging upside down above the river that flowed through the car, and the water never reached high enough to touch her, Johnson told the Deseret News newspaper. Her mother was found in the driver's seat.
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Family members told police that Lynn Groesbeck left her parents' nearby home in Salem about 10 pm Friday and was en route to her Springville home near Provo when the crash occurred.
She was enrolled at Provo College with a goal of becoming a medical assistant, Sanderson said, and had lived in the Provo area her entire life.
Three police officers and four firefighters who entered the river to push the car on its side and rescue the girl were released after treatment for hypothermia at a hospital. The temperature dipped to about 0 to 3 Celsius overnight while the girl was trapped in the car.