A hiker who was injured in Grand Canyon National Park disputed a statement from authorities that said his friends left him behind.Photo:Mohave County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue

njured Hiker Disputes Police Claim That His Friends Left Him Behind in Grand Canyon: ‘unjustly vilified’

Mohave County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue

A hiker who was rescued from Grand Canyon National Park last week is setting the record straight after officials initially claimed that his friends abandoned him after he was injured in order to continue backpacking.

In astatement, the Mojave County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue said that they received a distress call on Friday from “someone using an Apple device.”

Officials said that a group of five friends were hiking on the North Rim of the park along the Kanab Creek when one member of the group, identified as a 63-year-old man, fell and experienced a “traumatic injury to his shoulder that needed emergency medical attention and evacuation.”

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An air rescue helicopter arrived at the vicinity of the injured hiker based on the information from the Apple device and the hiker was stabilized and transported to a hospital in Flagstaff, Arizona, according to the sheriff’s office.

However, in an interview withInsider, William Formanek defended his friends, saying they “did all the exact right things" and “got me rescued.”

He went on to say that his friends were being “unjustly vilified in the media” due to the original statement.

Formanek told the outlet that the group was a few days into their seven-day backpacking excursion when he was injured. That Friday, he and another friend decided to hike further south down the Kanab Creek, splitting off from the rest of the hikers.

When he and the friend were returning to their campsite around 2:30 p.m., Formanek said he fell while crossing the creek and hit a boulder that resulted in his shoulder injury. He and the friend were unable to carry on and they didn’t have a satellite device, which the other three friends they separated from had.

“Hence, with my blessing and encouragement, my friend continued to hike, hoping to catch the others before dark and request a rescue," Formanek told the outlet.

Five miles later, the friend found the rest of the group around 5 p.m. and they put in the request for the search and rescue via their device.

More than three hours later, the rescue helicopter arrived a quarter mile from Formanek’s location, according to authorities.

After they were notified the following morning that Formanek had been safely airlifted, the rest of the group proceeded to hike out of the canyon, perThe Arizona Republic.

“He said they were on their way back to the campsite when the injury occurred," the updated statement read. “The other hiker left him alone and went to use an emergency device that was with the other three hikers who were a few miles away. When rescuers arrived on scene, he was alone.

“Search and Rescue encourages everyone when adventuring in the remote, wilderness areas of Mojave County to be prepared for the unexpected and in these remote wilderness settings,” they added.

source: people.com