logo
Bodies of 3 Hikers Who Jumped in Water Near Lake Tahoe Are Recovered

Bodies of 3 Hikers Who Jumped in Water Near Lake Tahoe Are Recovered

New York Times23-06-2025
The bodies of three hikers who disappeared after they jumped into the water at Rattlesnake Falls in Soda Springs, Calif., last week were found on Sunday, the authorities said, ending a multiday search that had been hampered by rough terrain and bad conditions.
The men, who had been hiking with three other people, jumped into the water on Wednesday, but did not resurface, the Placer County Sheriff's Office said in a statement posted online.
The three other hikers used a satellite phone to text 9-1-1 for help around 3 p.m. after the men did not reappear, Elise Soviar, the sheriff's office communication manager, said on Monday.
The area, about 30 miles from Lake Tahoe, has a 'challenging terrain' and is 'located several miles in on a steep and difficult hiking trail,' the sheriff's office said. A California Highway Patrol helicopter was used to evacuate the three remaining hikers on Wednesday evening.
Several agencies helped with the search for the men who had jumped in the water, including the sheriff's office dive team, search and rescue units, and Cal Fire's Technical Rescue Team.
The water in the region is 'always cold and hazardous this time of year due to snowpack melt,' said Ms. Soviar from the sheriff's office.
Rescue efforts were suspended on Thursday afternoon because debris and strong currents caused poor underwater visibility, the sheriff's office said, noting that increasing winds had also made flying conditions unsafe.
The search efforts continued on Friday and Saturday but were limited because of the wind conditions, according to the sheriff's office.
With the conditions improving Sunday, the office proceeded with a coordinated plan to return to the area where the men jumped and continued the search using enhanced equipment and support from search partners.
That morning, the authorities found the bodies of the three men.
The sheriff's office identified the men on Monday as Matthew Schoenecker, 50, of Los Angeles; Valentino Creus, 59, also of Los Angeles; and Matthew Anthony, 44, of New York City.
'Our heartfelt condolences go out to their families, friends, and all those affected by this tragic loss,' the sheriff's office said.
It is hard to quantify how frequently hikers need to be rescued from this remote and isolated area, Ms. Soviar said, but she noted that this was the only rescue effort there in the past year.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump sent the National Guard to LA in June. It was the busiest protest month in 5 years
Trump sent the National Guard to LA in June. It was the busiest protest month in 5 years

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump sent the National Guard to LA in June. It was the busiest protest month in 5 years

President Donald Trump received widespread backlash for his decision to deploy the National Guard in Washington, D.C., but it isn't the first time the move has stoked controversy in this term. Following a high profile assault on a 19-year-old former Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) employee known as "BigBalls," Trump announced his administration would take control of the Metropolitan Police Department and ordered 800 members of the guard to the nation's capital. In June, protests against widespread immigration arrests and raids prompted Trump to send the National Guard to Los Angeles, California. Trump said the guardsmen were sent to quell mostly peaceful protests, but he did so without the governor's consent or invitation. That was shortly before the "No Kings" protests that popped up on Trump's birthday all over the country, and organizers predicted Trump's militarized response in LA, which also included deploying marines in the city, would inspire more protesters. It ended up being the busiest protest month since 2020. Here is what to know: Are people protesting more than usual? 'Jaw-dropping' number planned on Trump's birthday Why did Trump deploy the National Guard in DC? Trump said he was taking over Washington, D.C., to address crime and homelessness, despite the fact that violent crime is down 26% in 2025 compared with last year. He deployed hundreds of National Guard troops and also moved to put the Metropolitan Police Department under control of the Department of Justice. Trump does have special authority to deploy the National Guard in D.C., and he did so in 2020 as well. "We're not going to lose our cities over this. This will go further. We're starting very strongly with D.C.," Trump said, adding that he may set his sights on other cities like Chicago in the future. The move drew harsh criticism from Democrats across the country. "Violent crime in D.C. is at its lowest level in 30 years. We had an unacceptable spike in 2023, so we changed our laws and strategies," Mayor Muriel Bowser said at a televised community meeting on Aug. 12. "Now, crime levels are not only down from 2023, but from before the pandemic. Our tactics are working, and we aren't taking our foot off the gas." On Aug. 15, the District of Columbia sued the administration in an attempt to halt Trump's police takeover. The DOJ previously declined to comment. June was the busiest month of protesting since 2020 Protests in the first half of the year were already trending higher than the first months of previous administrations before Trump sent the military in to largely peaceful protests in Los Angeles in early June. Dave Clark, a professor of political science at Binghamton University who collected global mass mobilization data, previously said the militarized response to protests could make a difference. "I would say that using the military for civil control is the wild card here," he said in June, explaining there is little relevant precedent for it in the U.S. "In many cases, the move to authoritarian kinds of tactics will actually bring out more protesters." Days later, people across the country participated in the "No Kings" protests that happened on Trump's 79th birthday and the day of the Army's 250th anniversary parade in D.C. Data from the Crowd Counting Consortium, a joint project between the Harvard Kennedy School and the University of Connecticut, show the first five months of this year have seen more protests than the first years of former President Joe Biden's term and Trump's first term. The consortium project collects publicly available information from political crowds in the U.S. at marches, protests, riots and more. The data also shows June 2025 saw more than 4,600 protests, the most in a calendar month since June 2020 when nearly 7,500 protests happened around the country following the police killing of George Floyd. Clark noted the data from protests after June 1 show a trend of objecting to "heavy handed" tactics, with the titles, notes and claims included in the data showing words like "militarized," "police state" and "sweep." Trump warned people who planned to protest against the district takeover that they, too, would be met with heavy force. "You spit and we hit," he said at his Aug. 11 press briefing. Are National Guard still in Los Angeles? Trump has pulled back all but a few hundred National Guard members it sent to Los Angeles. California sued the Trump administration after Trump deployed 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 active-duty Marines to Los Angeles amid the immigration arrest protests. Gov. Gavin Newsom has argued the deployment was an unlawful use of the military, according to Reuters. A multi-day trial took place ending Aug. 13, Reuters reported, and a ruling is expected in the coming weeks. Contributing: Bart Jansen, Joey Garrison, Trevor Hughes, Michael Loria, Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY Kinsey Crowley is the Trump Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach her at kcrowley@ Follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky at @ This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Anti-Trump protests ongoing in 2nd term, June busiest month since 2020

Woman's body found dumped in SoCal forest. Her husband fled the country with their kids, authorities say
Woman's body found dumped in SoCal forest. Her husband fled the country with their kids, authorities say

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Woman's body found dumped in SoCal forest. Her husband fled the country with their kids, authorities say

The body of a missing Southern California woman was found this weekend at the bottom of an embankment in the Angeles National Forest, according to authorities. Officials are now searching for her husband, whom they say fled to Peru with the couple's three children. The remains of 33-year-old Sheylla Cabrera, also known as Sheylla Lisbet Gutiérrez Rosillo, were found Saturday by the Montrose Search and Rescue Team, according to a statement from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. Her body was discovered wrapped in some sort of material, though the department did not elaborate. A precise cause of death has not yet been established and is being investigated by the L.A. County medical examiner's office, authorities said. Read more: Mother of missing 7-month-old refused a polygraph test but is cooperating, lawyer says The department's Lancaster station took a missing person's report regarding Cabrera on Aug. 12, authorities said. The next day, deputies found video surveillance footage allegedly showing a man authorities identified as her husband, Jossimar Cabrera, dragging an object "in a large piece of material" from an apartment complex in the 500 block of Lancaster Boulevard, where the couple lived with their three sons. Authorities in L.A. County cast a wide net to search for Jossimar Cabrera, 36, and the three boys. Homicide investigators also reached out to Mexican and Peruvian consular officials to alert them of their interest in Jossimar Cabrera. On Saturday, the children were recovered unharmed in Peru after they entered the country with their father, according to the Peruvian Ministry of Women and Vulnerable Populations. The whereabouts of Jossimar Cabrera, however, remain unknown. Read more: L.A. police reserve officer took part in home invasion, kidnapped man for ransom, prosecutors say The ministry has since come under fire because officials questioned Jossimar Cabrera at the airport in Lima and took the children into protective custody, but didn't detain him, according to several Peruvian media sources. He is believed to still be in the country, L.A. County officials said. The ministry also posted about the death of Sheylla Cabrera on social media, which it later deleted, before alerting her family. 'We deeply regret its publication, as it has jeopardized the investigation underway in the United States and also the work being done in Peru,' Jessy Gutiérrez, Sheylla Cabrera's sister, told the outlet Latina Noticias. "I ask the Ministry to exercise greater care and consideration when reporting, out of respect for my sister's memory." Read more: Woman fires at co-workers in O.C., then dies in police shooting in L.A. Peru's foreign ministry confirmed Saturday via social media that it had repatriated the children back to Los Angeles via Mexico City to be reunited with their mother's family. Sheylla Cabrera's mother, Helga Rocillo, told Latina Noticias that her daughter was intent on filing a criminal report against her husband due to alleged psychological and physical abuse. 'She told me that Jossimar Cabrera Cornejo hit her, mistreated her, and even slapped my youngest grandchild, who is 3 years old,' Rocillo told the outlet. Both the L.A. County Sheriff Department's public information officer and the Montrose rescue squad declined to answer questions from The Times. They directed all inquiries to Sheriff's Department detectives, who did not return a call Tuesday. Read more: Man is abducted from Cheviot Hills home, released in Glendale, in a case of mistaken identity, police say Sheriff's detectives are in the process of presenting the case to the L.A. County district attorney's office for filing consideration, and plan to seek a murder charge against Jossimar Cabrera, authorities said. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

'I won't give up': Tulı́t'a teen says he'll stop at nothing to find missing friend
'I won't give up': Tulı́t'a teen says he'll stop at nothing to find missing friend

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

'I won't give up': Tulı́t'a teen says he'll stop at nothing to find missing friend

Julian McPherson was on his way home to Tulı́t'a, N.W.T. Tuesday evening so that he could help search for his missing friend, 16-year-old River Clement. "River's one of my closest friends," said Mcpherson, 19. "It's always me and River." Clement was last seen around 5 a.m. Friday morning according to RCMP. The police service said clothing and a cell phone believed to belong to the teenager had been found in a boat drifting on the Mackenzie River that morning. After four days, the police service said the search had become a recovery operation rather than a rescue. It's information McPherson is still grappling with. "I'm just so confused about it. Why was he down there, alone, like 5:30, 6 in the morning? Nothing makes sense to me," McPherson said from Délı̨nę, while checking that he'd packed everything for a flight back to Tulı́t'a on Tuesday afternoon. He was cutting short his trip to the nearby N.W.T. community to go home and help. McPherson said once his plane touches down, he'll do anything to find Clement – and he's going to try his hardest to bring him home safe. Mayor calls for donations for search "I won't give up until we find him," he said. Doug Yallee, the mayor of Tulı́t'a, told CBC News the search for Clement continued on Tuesday. A search and rescue aircraft would have eyes in the sky, while community volunteers would continue to search from the ground and on the water. He also asked that people send financial donations to help cover the cost of food and gas necessary for continuing the effort. "All donations we can use for the community of Tulı́t'a here to locate this young person." RCMP will continue to help with the search for River, the force said in its news release on Monday evening. Other departments have pulled back from the search or say they weren't mobilized at all. A sergeant with the Canadian Ranger patrol group that had been involved in the search said their effort was called off on Sunday. But in a post on Facebook Clement's aunt, Lynda MacCauley, said that many rangers were still volunteering with the search on their own time. A spokesperson for Canada's Department of National Defence said its Joint Rescue Coordination Centre (JRCC) in Trenton had received a call from RCMP about the search and had offered to help. When JRCC followed up with police, however, it was told that its help wasn't needed anymore.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store