Glendale police and public works crews decided to bring in a crane during the rush hour commute to hoist the sedan out due to the slippery conditions in the channel caused by flowing water.
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FOR THE RECORD: An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was working to remove the car from the wash. In fact, it was Glendale police and public works crews.
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The woman, who wasn't immediately identified, entered the wash about 11 a.m. after reportedly confusing the concrete-lined channel for a freeway on-ramp, officials said. About a mile later, and after reaching speeds of up to 70 mph, the woman finally stopped after barreling down several 3-foot long steps.
She stopped before reaching a steep drop-off in the channel near San Fernando Road after being hailed down by maintenance workers, who she whizzed by at freeway speeds.
Problem is, the Mercedes came to rest below a bridge for train tracks used by Metrolink commuter trains, complicating the possibility of using a crane to pull the sedan out.
