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Switched At Death

ogopogo3

Gone But Not Forgotten
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Identity Mix-Up Stuns Crash Victims' Families
Comatose Woman in Hospital Went Misidentified for Weeks

AOLNews

CALEDONIA, Mich. (June 1) - Whitney Cerak and Laura VanRyn looked remarkably alike, both attractive young women with blond hair, similar facial features and the same build and height.

They were together the night of April 26, returning from banquet preparations with a group from Taylor University, when a tractor-trailer slammed into their university van, peeling off the side and killing five people.

Cerak's family was told their 18-year-old was among the dead. VanRyn's parents were told their 22-year-old daughter was alive but seriously injured and in a coma.

The VanRyns kept vigil at the young woman's bedside for weeks, but as she gained consciousness, she began saying things that didn't make sense. This week, they discovered that the recovering patient wasn't their daughter at all. She was Whitney Cerak.

"I still can't get over it. It's like a fairy tale,'' said Cerak's grandfather Emil Frank. "It's just so unbelievable. But we feel just as much for the family that found out it was not their daughter.''

VanRyn's parents, who had kept a daily Web log of the young woman's recovery after the crash, disclosed the mix-up on the blog.

"Our hearts are aching as we have learned that the young woman we have been taking care of over the past five weeks has not been our dear Laura,'' the family wrote.

Cerak's face was swollen after the crash, she was in a neck brace, and she had brain damage, broken bones and bruises. The Grant County, Ind., coroner said that the accident scene had been strewn with purses, and that students had identified the survivor as VanRyn. No scientific testing was conducted to verify the identities.

"I can't stress enough that we did everything we knew to do under those circumstances, and trusted the same processes and the same policies that we always do,'' said Coroner Ron Mowery. "This tragedy unfolded like we could never have imagined.''

In Cerak's hometown of Gaylord, in northern Michigan, her family held a closed-casket funeral that drew 1,400 people.

VanRyn's family, meanwhile, detailed the many small steps they believed their daughter was making toward recovery at a rehabilitation center in Grand Rapids: feeding herself applesauce, playing Connect Four with a therapist.

As recently as Monday, the VanRyns reported: "While certain things seem to be coming back to her, she still has times where she'll say things that don't make much sense.''

Mowery said VanRyn's boyfriend initially questioned her identity based on the young woman's behaviors and comments. Then VanRyn's father became suspicious when she referred to him by a pet name he didn't recognize.

"He started asking questions and the process evolved to where she actually came to and suggested who she was and wrote her name,'' Mowery said.

When relatives took their concerns about the young woman's comments to hospital officials, dental records confirmed the injured woman was actually Cerak.

"Both families understand how this could have happened,'' said Bruce Rossman, a spokesman for Spectrum Health, which operates the rehab center.

In a joint statement, the VanRyn and Cerak families said the two young women shared a "striking similarity in appearance.''

"Our families are supporting each other in prayer, and we thank our families, friends and communities for their prayers,'' the statement said.

Officials at Taylor University, an evangelical Christian college in Upland, Ind., about 60 miles northeast of Indianapolis, confirmed the case of mistaken identity.

"Certainly there are those people that are devastated today because the person, their friend, who they thought had lots of hope and was progressing every day - they now found out she has died,'' Taylor student body president Brent Maher told CNN Thursday. "There are also those who are rejoicing because Whitney is alive.''

Word of the mix-up also circulated at Gaylord High School, said Cerak's volleyball coach, Jen Mazza.

"I don't know what to feel right now. You're elated but you almost don't want to trust it,'' Mazza said. "Right now we just want to get her home and see her for ourselves. ... Everyone who was touched and grieving for Whitney will be grieving for the other family. We've been there.''

Joe Sereno, associate pastor at Gaylord Evangelical Free Church, said what had been thought to have been Cerak's casket had been closed both for visitation and for the funeral.

"We did everything you usually do,'' Sereno said. "We had a memorial service at the church. The family did a private burial the next day. Everybody thought it was Whitney.''

Telephone messages were left Wednesday and Thursday for the VanRyns and Ceraks. A young man outside the VanRyns' home declined a reporter's requests for comment Thursday.

On Wednesday evening, a steady stream of cars came and went from the VanRyns' house in Caledonia, a village about 20 miles southeast of Grand Rapids. A memorial service for VanRyn is scheduled Sunday near Grand Rapids.
 
I have just been discussing this with a coworker and we can't really understand how this came about. They must have been really beaten up beyond recognition poor lasses. You'd think the coroner would have relied on something more than the testimony of other students to confirm the identitiy of the dead girl. The poor souls....
 
Having seen a picture of the two girls in the paper they did look very similar and as you say they were very badly disfigured.It's a very sad situation
 
Wow. The parents must have been devastated when they found out it wasn't there daughter. :cry:
 
Not quite accurate title to this follow-up story:

The incredible story of the girl who went to her own funeral
By JENNY JOHNSTON Last updated at 22:55pm on 2nd May 2008

How many people can explain what it feels like to listen to their own funeral service?

Well, 21-year-old Whitney Cerak can - although, hardly surprisingly, even she struggles to find the words to do so.

One afternoon last August, she sat beside her father at the family dining table and pressed "play" to hear the definitive summing up of her young life.

More than 1,400 people had packed into the church, in the American town of Caledonia, Michigan, to say goodbye to her in 2006, and the proceedings had been recorded. No one could have dreamed that one day Whitney herself would be able to listen to their tributes.

"I can barely describe how it felt," she says. "Odd. Weird. Surreal. A bit scary. I'm the only person I know who has listened to their own funeral.

"It was as if they were talking about someone else. People were saying wonderful things about me - about how I had touched their lives. I thought, 'All this? For me?'. That bit was humbling.

"But mostly I found it upsetting. To hear the eulogy, my dad's voice, my sister talking about all the parts of her life that I wasn't going to share - that was hard. I don't think I will be listening to it again."

It sounds like the implausible plot of some cheap soap opera, but what happened to Whitney Cerak and her family was all too real.

She found herself at the centre of one of the most astonishing cases of mistaken identity ever, when she was wrongly named as the dead victim of a terrible road accident.

Four students and one teacher were involved in the collision in the town of Fort Worth, in April 2006. Five died at the scene and the only survivor - a pretty blonde girl who was discovered unconscious with serious head injuries - was identified as 22-year-old Laura Van Ryn, partly because Laura's purse was found next to her.

The badly injured girl was not Laura, however, but Whitney, who was then just days from her 19th birthday.

It was the sort of mistake that would normally be picked up quickly, at least as soon as relatives were involved, but in this case, it wasn't

[article continues...]


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/f ... ge_id=1879
 
rynner said:
...It sounds like the implausible plot of some cheap soap opera, but what happened to Whitney Cerak and her family was all too real.

She found herself at the centre of one of the most astonishing cases of mistaken identity ever, when she was wrongly named as the dead victim of a terrible road accident.

Four students and one teacher were involved in the collision in the town of Fort Worth, in April 2006. Five died at the scene and the only survivor - a pretty blonde girl who was discovered unconscious with serious head injuries - was identified as 22-year-old Laura Van Ryn, partly because Laura's purse was found next to her.....


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/f ... ge_id=1879

This is the plot of an episode of CSI (can't remember which version), which predates this case and so obviously isn't based on it.
 
An episode of House plays the same tune, but I don't know the season.
 
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