Edmonton Journal

Fundraiser set up for crash survivor

Vancouver Island fish-plant worker stuck in car for days with severe injuries after going over cliff

- TIFFANY CRAWFORD With files from The Canadian Press ticrawford@postmedia.com

The family of a 23-yearold Vancouver Island man who was trapped in a crushed vehicle for five days has started a Gofundme campaign to raise money for the seriously injured survivor.

Duncan Moffat remains in an intensive care unit at Victoria General Hospital after his truck went off a cliff south of Sayward, 74 km northwest of Campbell River, and he was pinned inside the vehicle.

Moffat was unable to move after sustaining multiple broken bones and internal injuries.

Not only was he trapped, but he was out of cellphone range so he had no way of contacting anyone.

He survived on a crate of apples and a bit of Gatorade, according to family.

Moffat was found by chance by a hunter on Tuesday afternoon and taken by air to hospital for treatment of a broken shoulder, ribs, a broken leg and a partly collapsed lung.

The Gofundme campaign has since been created to raise money to help the young man recover.

His family said Wednesday that Moffat had more injuries than initially thought.

He also has a broken clavicle and a number of internal organ injuries.

“It is a miracle he survived,” said Molly Fraser, Moffat’s cousin, who set up the Gofundme page.

“Duncan has experience­d severe trauma, both mentally and physically, and requires help to get through this. All donations will go towards his recovery program including physiother­apy, counsellin­g, recovery equipment and much more.”

Fraser said, in a Messenger conversati­on, that Moffat had just finished a seasonal job at the fish plant on Quadra Island.

She added that at this point they don’t know when he will be able to stand again, so it will be a long time before he is able to return to work.

Fraser noted that Moffat will not only require physical therapy, but also counsellin­g because he suffered severe mental trauma while he was trapped for five days.

“We want to make sure he gets the proper help he needs,” she said.

Moffat’s uncle, Bill Macnab, told The Canadian Press that Moffat had been out of touch with the family for almost 10 days, but he believes he was stuck in the truck, which was 12 metres down the side of a cliff, for five days.

Macnab said the harrowing rescue took several hours, as rescuers needed the Jaws of Life to cut away the driver’s side of the vehicle.

His father, Glen Moffat, phoned family members from the scene and reported his son had survived.

Moffat’s grandfathe­r, Alex Moffat, says he’s a “very, very lucky boy” and described the hunter’s discovery of the wreckage as “one chance in a million.”

Duncan has experience­d severe trauma, both mentally and physically, and requires help to get through this.

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