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'Dragon' crash survivor shares final goodbye videos

Travis Dorman
travis.dorman@knoxnews.com

Kevin Diepenbrock was dying, and he knew it. As he lay on the earth beneath "The Dragon," unable to move and barely able to breathe, he filmed his final goodbyes to his parents and his wife.

Sunlight piercing through the trees. A shaky camera. A bloodied face on fall foliage. "Hey, everybody," he says in the first of three videos. His words come in short bursts as he finds the strength to speak. "I f***** up, that's all I can really say. At about 10:30 this morning. Been laying here ever since. About 50 feet down in the ravine. I just wanted to say I love you guys. Sorry I was being stupid, but you know that's what I do."

Kevin Diepenbrock lies on the ground after a crash on "The Dragon" on Oct. 15, 2016.

"See you guys soon," he says as the first video ends. By the time he filmed the third video in total darkness, his voice had grown hoarse and faltering, and he doesn't sound quite so optimistic.

'Dragon' crash survivor speaks on near-death experience

Kevin and Courtney Diepenbrock watched the videos for the first time on Monday night in his hospital room at the University of Tennessee Medical Center. He initially decided he didn't want anyone else to see them, and deleted them from his phone.

But on Tuesday, he retrieved them from cloud storage and shared them with the News Sentinel.

Kevin Diepenbrock recalls his motorcycle accident and his rescue nearly 30 hours later while at the UT Medical Center on Monday, Oct. 24, 2016. Diepenbrock and his friend Phil Polito were riding their motorcycles on a stretch of U.S. Highway 129 known as "The Dragon" on Saturday, Oct. 22, when the two collided. The crash had flung both men 105 feet down an embankment and out of sight of passing vehicles.

On Oct. 15, Diepenbrock and Phillip Polito, his riding companion and co-worker at a natural gas plant near Philadelphia, Pa., tumbled more than 100 feet down a rocky embankment after their motorcycles collided on a notorious stretch of Highway 129 near mile marker 4 called "The Dragon."

Polito, 29, of Perryville, Mo., was killed in the crash, and the 41-year-old Diepenbrock was flung out of sight from the motorists who get a thrill from the treacherous road's sharp curves and scenic views. With two punctured lungs, 17 breaks in 12 ribs and multiple spinal fractures, Diepenbrock couldn't move. He had no cellphone signal. He lay on the ground for 30 hours before he was rescued, yelling as he listened to every car that passed and slowly realizing that maybe, he wouldn't make it out alive.