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Woman survives 8 days in car crash

Injured driver trapped after vehicle plunged 20 feet into ravine near Seattle

JOSHUA TRUJILLO / Post-Intelligencer
Washington State Troopers take measurements at the site where a Honda Element crashed in a ravine southeast of Renton, Wash., where a 33-year-old woman missing for eight days was found alive Thursday. Tanya Rider responded to her name when her car was found on State Highway 169 southeast of Renton, State Patrol Sgt. Dave Divis said.
Published: Saturday, September 29, 2007 at 3:51 a.m.
Last Modified: Friday, September 28, 2007 at 9:00 p.m.

SEATTLE -- No one had heard from Tanya Rider for more than a week. Her husband, having already opened up their bank and phone accounts to investigators, was just sitting down to take a polygraph test to prove that he had not harmed her.

Then they found her, alive.

Twenty feet down a roadside ravine, still strapped into the front seat of her Honda Element, Tanya Rider, 33, responded faintly when rescuers called her name through the blackberry bushes that had helped conceal her since her car ran off the road near the Seattle suburb of Renton on Sept. 19. Her kidneys were failing from dehydration and a buildup of toxins caused by muscle damage. Her clavicle and ribs were broken, her shoulder dislocated, her left leg severely hurt.

It was the signal from her cell phone that finally led investigators to Tanya Rider on Thursday, after what her husband of eight years, Tom, said Friday were days of futile efforts to have her disappearance investigated as a missing person case.

Tom Rider expressed gratitude Friday to the police officers who found his wife, but not for what he said were the restrictions that kept them from finding her sooner.

"The policy that tied their hands nearly cost my wife her life," he said.

Tanya Rider was last seen leaving work at a Fred Meyer department store in Bellevue, Wash., on Sept. 19. Tom Rider, 39, said he has two jobs, delivering pizza at night and working as a superintendent of housing developments during the day, and that he did not know for sure that his wife was missing until the morning of Sept. 22.

At that point, he said, he called the police in Bellevue, which is about 15 miles north of their home in Maple Valley. He said they told him the case was out of their jurisdiction and they referred him to the King County Sheriff's Office.

Tom Rider said he was told by the sheriff's office that his wife could not be treated as a missing person yet because she was an adult who had showed no signs of dementia or of being suicidal.

He said he began asking as early as Sept. 22 if investigators could try to trace his wife through cell phone signals but was told no, because she had not been classified as a missing person.

Rodney Chinnick, a spokesman for the King County Sheriff's Office, told reporters that activity on one of Tanya Rider's bank accounts after she was reported missing initially "left us with a false impression that this was a voluntary missing-person case."

Chinnick said investigators initially thought that only Tanya Rider had access to the account. Tom Rider said Friday that he told the police that that was not the case and that the account showed activity because he used it to buy gas while he was driving around the area trying to find his wife.

Tom Rider said he volunteered records to investigators and offered to have a polygraph test to "eliminate myself" from suspicion and expedite the investigation. That process, he said, led investigators to treat his wife as a missing person.

Rescuers had to cut off the roof of the Honda to remove her, and McIntyre said Tanya Rider appeared to have been positioned so that much of her weight rested on a seat belt.


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