Los Angeles Times

‘Our loss came so tragic’

Teens’ families grieve as three bodies are taken from a ravine. ‘Speed may have been a factor,’ official says.

- BY JOSEPH SERNA AND VERONICA ROCHA joseph.serna@latimes.com veronica.rocha @latimes.com Staff writer Richard Winton contribute­d to this report.

Authoritie­s have recovered three bodies from a mangled pickup truck discovered at the bottom of a deep ravine in the Angeles National Forest and confirmed Tuesday that the vehicle belonged to one of three missing Fontana teens.

Fontana police have been searching since the weekend for Daniel Gamboa, 19; Kasey Vance, 19; and Samantha Ornelas, 17. The trio had set off on a hiking excursion in Gamboa’s 2008 white Toyota Tundra pickup truck but failed to return.

Although officials at the Los Angeles County coroner’s office said they must still officially identify the bodies, they have determined that the crashed truck belonged to Gamboa.

The wreck was deemed “unreachabl­e” and will probably remain at the bottom of the ravine, according to California Highway Patrol Officer Ryan Bejar. The position of the vehicle and the steepness of the mountainsi­de made it impossible for heavy equipment to remove the wreckage, he said.

“I think we are not going to get it up,” Bejar said.

Investigat­ors and search-and-rescue personnel used ropes and an L.A. County sheriff’s helicopter to lower themselves to the crash site some 900 feet below Angeles Crest Highway. The terrain was “exceedingl­y difficult” to navigate, said Brian Elias, department chief for the L.A. County medical examinerco­roner.

Once investigat­ors reached the bodies, they documented the scene and then slowly began removing the remains from the crash site. The bodies were taken to the county morgue for examinatio­n and identifica­tion, Elias said.

The truck was discovered shortly after 5:20 p.m. Monday, when authoritie­s received a report of fresh skid marks on the road. A sheriff’s helicopter was sent to search the area and spotted the truck in an area known as the Trees of Color.

The three teens, who attended Summit High School in Fontana, had told family and friends on Saturday that they were going hiking in the Angeles National Forest, possibly heading to Mt. Wilson.

When they failed to return home Monday, relatives alerted the police.

On Tuesday, California Department of Transporta­tion workers closed a section of the Angeles Crest Highway near mile marker 40, an area that bears many looping skid marks.

The truck was discovered at the bottom of one of the steepest drops along the entire highway, Bejar said, adding that it was impossible to see a car there from the road’s edge.

The fresh tire marks appear to show that the vehicle was eastbound on the highway and rounding a curve when the driver hit the brakes hard and went over the edge, according to the CHP.

“Speed may have been a factor in the crash,” Bejar said.

There was no evidence that another vehicle was involved in the wreck and no record of a 911 call reporting an accident in the area, he said.

The road was reopened early Tuesday afternoon after the bodies were recovered. A crew of Caltrans workers who were making repairs said it appeared that the truck had clipped a guard-rail end-cap before dropping into the ravine. If the truck had hit the rail just a little further down, it might not have left the roadway, they speculated.

In a tribute on Facebook, Isabel Ornelas asked friends to celebrate her sister’s life.

“My heart will never be the same... My little sissy bear has left this earth,” she wrote.

Isabel Ornelas set up a GoFundMe account to help pay for funeral expenses.

“Our loss came so tragic and quickly,” she said.

In social media posts, Gamboa wrote about paintball battles and playing guitar. He was also interested in the military and was a “Star Wars” fan, according to his Facebook account.

A 2014 photo posted of Vance and Gamboa shows the two friends grinning as they zip through the sky on a roller coaster ride. Another picture shows the pair posing for a camera in their paintball gear.

Gamboa’s cousin, Nick Gamboa, posted a tribute to him online.

“With all my heart, my cousin will be missed,” he wrote in a Facebook post.

 ?? Raul Roa La Canada Valley Sun ?? MARI TOVAR, aunt of Samantha Ornelas, is hugged by Kasey Vance’s father near the Angeles Crest Highway crash site.
Raul Roa La Canada Valley Sun MARI TOVAR, aunt of Samantha Ornelas, is hugged by Kasey Vance’s father near the Angeles Crest Highway crash site.

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