Toronto Star

Dead hikers discovered locked in embrace

- AMY WANG THE WASHINGTON POST

By the time the bodies of Rachel Nguyen and Joseph Orbeso were discovered in Joshua Tree National Park, the two hadn’t been seen for nearly three months.

They had been reported missing July 28 by the owner of a nearby bed-and-breakfast, who told authoritie­s the pair had probably gone hiking but never returned to check out.

Their disappeara­nce set off a massive search — involving aircraft, dogs, horses and search-and-rescue workers on foot — in the vast, rugged national park. The day that Nguyen and Orbeso vanished, a park ranger discovered their empty vehicle near the park’s Maze Loop trailhead.

Orbeso’s father threw himself into the search efforts, scouring the rocky landscapes in the unforgivin­g desert heat for any signs of his son, according to the Desert Sun. Gilbert Orbeso told the newspaper that he had last seen his son on July 26, just before Nguyen had picked him up to go on the trip, which was to celebrate her birthday.

At last, on Oct. 15, a park ranger reported seeing “two deceased persons located inside . . . a steep canyon to the far north of the Maze Loop Trailhead.”

The following morning, investigat­ors went into the canyon by air to retrieve the bodies, which were soon identified as Nguyen, 20, and Orbeso, 22. Both had gunshot wounds, according to a statement from the Morongo Basin Sheriff’s Department.

“Based on evidence located at the scene, detectives believe Orbeso shot Nguyen, then shot himself,” the statement read. “The investigat­ion into Orbeso’s actions remain under investigat­ion.”

Gilbert Orbeso, who was with Joshua Tree Search and Rescue when his son’s body was found, said the two friends had been locked in an embrace when they died.

 ??  ?? Authoritie­s say the deaths of Rachel Nguyen, left, and Joseph Orbeso may be a murder-suicide.
Authoritie­s say the deaths of Rachel Nguyen, left, and Joseph Orbeso may be a murder-suicide.

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