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Family: Woman Stranded After Crash Will Lose Feet

DENVER (AP/CBS4) - The family of a woman who was stranded for days after her car hurtled off a mountain pass says she will lose both her feet as a result of the injuries she suffered.

The family of Kristin Hopkins made a brief statement on Monday through a spokesman outside St. Anthony Hospital where they said Hopkins would undergo surgery later in the day.

"While we are hopefully of her prognosis, Kristin was seriously injured and with multiple internal and external injuries," said family spokesman Brian Willie.

Park County Crash (3) kristen hopkins
(credit: Silver Heels Towing)

Hopkins wrote pleas for help on a red-and-white umbrella that she managed to push through a broken window of her crashed car and open, hoping to attract the attention of drivers on a scenic highway above.

Kristin Hopkins Umbrella
Messages Kristin Hopkins scriblled on the umbrella (credit: Brian Willie/Park County Sheriff's Office)
Kristin Hopkins Umbrella
Messages Kristin Hopkins scriblled on the umbrella (credit: Brian Willie/Park County Sheriff's Office)

Still, it was five days before anyone spotted the flipped car 80 feet down an embankment on U.S. Highway 285 in a Colorado aspen grove.

Authorities said people driving Sunday over the high spot overlooking the sprawling ranchlands and surrounding mountains of the South Park area hiked down and alerted authorities that they thought there was a body inside the car, but rescuers later found Hopkins alive, conscious and coherent but critically injured and extremely dehydrated.

RELATED: Highlands Ranch Woman Found Alive In Crashed Car

Hopkins was flown by helicopter to St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood, Park County undersheriff Monte Gore said. She was still listed in critical condition Monday morning.

Investigators say she went off the right side of the roadway near Fairplay while navigating a left curve on Red Hill Pass on April 29, the same day she was reported missing in Douglas County, where she lives.

Park County Crash (1) MAP
(credit: CBS)

Hopkins was entered into a statewide police database as a missing person but since she is an adult and there were no indications of foul play, there was no active search for her.

The firefighters who rescued her initially thought they were on a recovery mission. When they arrived at the car, firefighter Jim Cravener asked a colleague to break a window and feel for a pulse.

"He started to break the window and she put her hand up to the window," he said. "At that point, it became a rescue."

Cravener said her notes on the umbrella were hard to make out, but appeared to say, six days, no food, no water; please help me; and need a doctor.

"It's really something off that 'Shouldn't Be Alive' show," Cravener said. "She really had a strong will to survive."

Cravener said sightseers often stop at the spot but usually in the fall when the leaves are turning color. It was just by chance that somebody would stop at this time of year, he said.

Firefighters called for a helicopter, which arrived in about 15 minutes and landed 400 yards farther down the hillside. Then, rescuers set to work cutting into the vehicle, pulling out Hopkins, and taking her to the helicopter. It was a complicated extrication because of the location, Cravener said.

Cravener said Hopkins was fairly responsive at first, even telling her rescuers she was not hurt. But they could see her face was badly bruised, possibly by the steering wheel or air bag.

"She didn't talk a whole lot. She started to become less responsive as we carried her down the hill. We had to keep waking her up," Cravener said.

Cravener said Hopkins' car had gone off the road at a fairly sharp corner at the top of a pass where others have had similar accidents. But he said he had never found a car as far down the slope.

"I cant even begin to imagine, it had to be horrible, I mean it had to be just terrible," said Cravener.

The area has had spring snow storms but not bitterly cold temperatures in the past several days, but the ground was clear of snow on the day Hopkins was found.

- By Donna Bryson, AP Writer

Researcher Rhonda Shafner contributed to this report.

(TM and © Copyright 2014 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2014 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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