A man wrote goodbye letters to his family as he lay dying in the wreckage of his van after crashing into a remote ravine in Utah. David Welch, 54, disappeared after leaving home in Manhattan, Kansas, on September 3. His body was discovered on October 18 by a hitchhiker who spotted the crash site on a desolate stretch of Interstate 70 - more than 50 miles from any town and nearly 900 miles from his home. Mr Welch was injured in the crash and was unable to get out of his vehicle. According to reports the salesman could have survived for more than a week and during this time he kept a diary and wrote notes to his wife Kelly and four sons. Utah Highway Patrol Lt Scott Robertson told the Salt Lake Tribune: "It's a pretty lonely stretch out there." But when asked what the letters contained he told the paper it was "a pretty private matter". The Tribune quoted Mr Welsh's wife Kelly as saying on Twitter: "Dave was entrapped in the vehicle down the 80ft ravine, he wrote each of us a love note. "He knew he was dying and there was no way out." Police have said they do not know why Mr Welch left his home without telling his family where he was going and there are no clues suggesting why he was driving through Utah.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Manchester Citymidfielder Yaya Toure was subjected to noises that sounded like monkey chanting as his side faced CSKA Moscow in Russia on Wednesday. City have confirmed that they intend to submit an official complaint to UEFA over the alleged abuse, and a club official even spoke to the match delegate from the organisation after the match at the Arena Khimki with a written complaint to follow. Toure spoke of his sadness over the matter at the end of the game after he appeared to point to referee Ovidiu Hategan to identify specific sections of the CSKA supporters who were allegedly abusing him. The midfielder has been widely commended for his inspirational and dignified response to the incidents and in reporting what happened via social media and interviews. The Ivory Coast international told Sky Sports: "It is quite disappointing when you're talking about people continuing to do that. "It is unbelievable and very sad on my part. "I think UEFA need to do something strong. It would be nice if we could stop that. "Some of the songs today were quite stupid and I think UEFA has to do the work. "Every time we say something it continues, something has to be done to stop it." The papers were full of praise for the way that the City star reactedto the reported abuse and spoke with such 'strength' and 'class' after the match. Toure Tweeted after the match: "Thank you for your support! Hate or racism cannot affect me when so many people are showing me love and support on a daily basis! "I believe in football institutions, I know decision makers will take their responsibilties and show A RED CARD TO RACISM." Thank you for your support! Hate or racism cannot affect me when so many people are showing me love and support on a daily basis! — yaya toure (@Toure_yaya42) October 23, 2013 I believe in football institutions, I know decision makers will take their responsibilties and show A RED CARD TO RACISM — yaya toure (@Toure_yaya42) October 23, 2013 There was a great deal of support for Toure on social media with many fans keen to say how impressed they were with his conduct throughout. Yaya Toure extremely dignified, mature & sensible talking about racist chants. Class act — Alex Kunawicz (@AlexKunawicz) October 23, 2013 Dignified response from Yaya Toure in the face of blatant racism from CSKA fans, calling it 'disappointing'! Disgusting is more appropriate! — Michael McCarthy (@mkmccarthy1989) October 23, 2013 The incident comes 18 months after Porto were fined £16,700 by UEFA after their fans racially abused Mario Balotelli during a Europa League clash against City in February 2012. City also lodged an official complaint on that occasion, when monkey-chanting had been prolonged and widespread. Controversially, City were later fined £24,740 for delaying the kick-off of the second half of that same game by one minute. All eyes will now be on UEFA to see if they react strongly enough to this most recent episode.

Why Texas is labeled Canada on this map of the ‘ridiculously large’ U.S. economy

Xapo: Where Billionaires Store Their Keys