Paraglider finds iPhone unscathed after 2K-foot drop


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DRAPER — Chris Santacroce was paragliding Thursday in Draper near Lone Peak when his iPhone slipped out of his pocket and fell some 2000 feet to the ground.

He didn't even know it. "I land and I'm checking my pockets. It's not there," he said.

He knew iPhones have a tracking feature, though, so he drove home to get on a computer. The "Find My iPhone" tracking software brought up a map with a dot pinpointing where his iPhone landed on the mountain.

"It's got great detail. It shows the canyon, it shows the rock, and it shows the bush that it's next to," he said. "But there was a fire on the mountain this past summer, so not all those features are the same as what the map was showing."

Santacroce drove back to the general area and started hiking in thigh-deep snow. When the sun set, he called his wife to borrow her iPhone so he could make his lost iPhone beep.

The tracking software he used to pinpoint his phone also has a feature that will make it beep like a sonar. As soon as he made the phone beep, he heard it.

"Wouldn't you know, about 10 feet away, just a little closer to the gully than I thought, I can see the thing in the snow," he said. "It's making a little light and I can hear the sonar sound. I couldn't believe it."


Worked like the day I bought it.

–Chris Santacroce


He also noticed small animal prints around the phone.

"You can tell a little animal must have come up, heard the sound, had a look, turned around and went back," he said.

He's just happy he found his phone, and that it didn't have a dent, scratch or broken glass.

"Worked like the day I bought it," Santacroce said, laughing.

Other popular smartphones, like Droids and Galaxies, also have tracking software to find the phone if it's lost. But Santacroce is sticking to his iPhone.

"It saved me $600 to buy another one," he said.

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Alex Cabrero

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