Detroit Free Press

Missing Michigan nurse’s body discovered

Ann Herford disappeare­d in Calif. while hiking recently

- USA TODAY

Eric Lagatta

For days, hundreds of California rescuers held out hope of finding a Michigan woman who had disappeare­d while hiking alone through mountainou­s terrain in the central Sierra Nevada Mountains.

Unmanned drones whizzed through the skies providing support from above, while on the ground, search teams with canines and allterrain vehicles scoured the vast wilderness for any sign of 66-year-old Ann Herford, a traveling nurse from Elkton near the top of Michigan’s Thumb.

But a week after officials announced they had reined in their search efforts – and nearly two weeks after Herford first went missing – rescue teams found Herford’s body.

Around 9 a.m. local time on Thursday, the body was discovered on a steep hillside beneath heavy tree canopy and dense foliage, according to the Calaveras County Sheriff’s Office, which led the multi-agency rescue operation.

The area

Herford

is north of where Herford had parked her vehicle on Nov. 12 to embark on a solo hike of the Arnold Rim Trail, about 100 miles southeast of Sacramento.

Herford expressed interest in hiking, but lacked survival skills

Herford was first reported missing Nov. 14 after she failed to show up for work in Sonora, California, the Calaveras County Sheriff ’s Office said.

A friend of the nurse told law enforcemen­t that Herford, who had been staying alone at a Sonora hotel, had expressed interest in hiking when the two had been out to breakfast three days earlier.

A witness later recalled seeing Herford a day after the breakfast on Nov. 12 near a trailhead of the Arnold Rim Trail, a mid-elevation trail for hikers, mountain bikers and equestrian­s. Authoritie­s found Herford’s car on Nov. 15, according to the sheriff ’s office.

While family members told law enforcemen­t that Herford enjoyed hiking, they said she lacked wilderness survival skills and never hiked more than a couple of miles at a time, the sheriff’s office said.

When the search first began, the sheriff ’s office urged residents of the nearby Lakemont subdivisio­n to check their property and

outbuildin­gs for any sign of the woman.

Several agencies, including Army, part of ‘extensive’ search

In the days that followed, hundreds of searchers with more than a dozen agencies fanned out across the wilderness to locate Herford, the sheriff ’s office said.

The Air National Guard and the United States Army were among those that provided air support to those on the ground. The terrain was so perilous as to warrant specialize­d high angle rope teams, off-road vehicles, dive teams with remote-operated vehicles and canine search teams, the sheriff ’s office said.

Investigat­ors also conducted a forensic examinatio­n of Herford’s vehicle and her computer.

But by Nov. 22, a week after rescue operations began, the sheriff’s office announced it was reining in the search.

By that time, the “extensive” seven-day search included contributi­ons from 18 agencies and a total of 478 searchers, the sheriff ’s office said.

“The search operation spanned a challengin­g and mountainou­s 12 square-mile area, in which search teams created over 2,475 linear miles of search tracks,” the agency said in a Nov. 22 post on Facebook.

Foul play not suspected in Herford’s death

While limited in scope, the search continued for the next week through a dense forest of tall trees and mountainou­s terrain until Herford’s body was found.

The search’s end came at “an extremely steep and dense section” of the wilderness located north of San Antonio Creek and south of Forest Road, the sheriff’s office said. The area, which was not part of the Arnold Rim Trail, was where Herford was found dead.

The California Highway Patrol was called in to airlift the woman’s body from the area, which was not easily accessible on foot, the sheriff ’s office said.

It was not immediatel­y clear how Herford died, but authoritie­s said they do not suspect foul play was a factor.

Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at elagatta@ gannett.com.

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 ?? CALAVERAS COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE ?? A member of the Calaveras County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue looks out over the vast wilderness near the town of Arnold during the search for Ann Herford. The traveling nurse from Michigan was reported missing Nov. 14.
CALAVERAS COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE A member of the Calaveras County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue looks out over the vast wilderness near the town of Arnold during the search for Ann Herford. The traveling nurse from Michigan was reported missing Nov. 14.

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