By LUCY ORMONDE
One phone call was all it took to end Sarah Durazza’s life.
It was only a month ago that the 26-year-old was driving down a dark road in northern Sydney, when she picked up the phone and called her mum.
It was at that exact moment that Sarah misjudged a curve in the road, lost control of her car, rolled down an embankment and smashed into a tree.
All the while Sarah’s mum, Fiona, was still on the phone.
Last night, Fiona Durazza told 60 Minutes reporter Karl Stefanovic about what it was like to hear the final moments her daughter’s life.
Fighting back tears, Fiona described the night: “What we heard was Sarah’s voice saying ‘oh shit’ and noises whooshing … the car radio playing and breathing – heavy breathing – and a gasp for air and then the noise … I’ll never forget the whooshing noise going through the phone.”
“I just kept saying, ‘I love you Sarah, I love you, we’re coming! Hang in there, we’re coming.'”
But it was too late.
Fiona and Sarah’s boyfriend, Scott were travelling on the road just a few minutes behind Sarah, but when they arrived on the scene Sarah was already gone. “I jumped out of the car and I ran towards her car and my legs sort of gave way,” Fiona said.
“It was like she didn’t want me to find her or get any closer.”
“I couldn’t believe what I was hearing and I just said ‘no’.”
Fiona, her husband Paul and their three surviving children Rob, Pete and Laura told their story this week in the hope that it would discourage other people from using their phones while driving.
They don’t want any family – any person – to suffer the way that they have.
“Mum just came through the door saying ‘she’s gone. My beautiful daughter, she’s gone.’ And she just kept repeating that and repeating that. And I’ve never seen my mother like that,” Laura said.
Top Comments
I pass the phone to the kids in the backseat to answer or text back if I'm driving. They love the opportunity to use Mummy's phone and if it's important it gives me time to pull over and take the call properly.
So, there's this guy, who is clearly interested in us being more than friends. Honestly -he's not really my type for something like that, but for some bizarre reason, he believes that texting me while driving and TELLING me that he's texting me while he's driving (like I'm more important than keeping himself/other's safe on the roads) is somehow EARNING him brownie points with me. Even after a mutual friend said to him that there was no way I would ever go out with a guy who endangers people's lives like that - he still thinks he's doing something 'super cool'.