Springfield News-Sun

Family’s death in California forest is shrouded in mystery

- Neil Vigdor

The couple had backpacked in the Himalayas, ridden camels through the Gobi Desert and checked off Burning Man, even creating their own hashtag, an amalgamati­on of their first names: #jellonadve­ntures.

So a day of hiking in the Sierra National Forest, even with the demanding switchback­s and triple-digit heat, would not have been unusual for Jonathan Gerrish and Ellen Chung, husband-andwife transplant­s from San Francisco who had recently become parents to a little girl, Miju, during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But the trek would be the family’s last: Search teams found all three of their bodies on Aug. 17, one day after the family was reported missing not far from Yosemite National Park. The family’s dog, Oski, an Aussie-akita mix, was also found dead.

More than two weeks later, investigat­ors are still confounded by what caused their deaths. Teams in hazmat suits had already combed the area for clues. Last Saturday, the U.S. Forest Service closed trails and recreation sites near where the bodies were found.

The Forest Service had previously posted warning signs about potentiall­y toxic algae blooms in the area. The agency said it had taken the step to “protect the public from unknown hazards.”

That developmen­t further disconcert­ed those who knew the family, including Steven Jeffe, a friend and neighbor in Mariposa, California.

“It’s mysterious,” Jeffe said, “the unknown of what danger possibly lies there.”

Jeffe said he became friends with the couple when all of them lived in San Francisco. He described Gerrish, a software engineer born in Britain, and Chung, a graduate student in family therapy who had worked as a yoga instructor, as outdoor types who were experience­d hikers.

Gerrish, 45, had worked as a software engineer for Google, according to his Linkedin profile. Most recently, he had worked for Snapchat, according to Jeffe. Chung, 30, was raised in Southern California, Jeffe said.

“It’s such a beautiful family,” Jeffe said. “It’s obviously so devastatin­g.”

Initial autopsy results have provided no answers to authoritie­s. Investigat­ors said that there were no signs of trauma and that they were investigat­ing possible lightning strikes in the area.

On Aug. 19, the California State Water Resources Control Board, using a water quality reporting map on its website, warned the public to “stay away from algae and scum in the water” near the south fork of the Merced River in the Sierra National Forest.

An incident descriptio­n said the agency had received a report of a “suspected illness” in the area. The warning previously made reference to a fatality, but was changed to say illness, The Fresno Bee reported.

According to the Sheriff ’s Office, the family was reported missing at 11 p.m. Aug. 16. The next day, search teams found the couple’s vehicle near one of the gates to the Sierra National Forest. Their bodies were found a short time later near Devil Gulch.

“My thought initially was perhaps the car veered off the trail,” said Jeffe, who cut short a trip to Croatia when he learned that the bodies had been found. “People were going to go out and look.”

“Their daughter was everything,” Jeffe said.

 ?? STEVEN JEFFE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? This undated image shows Jonathan Gerrish, Ellen
Chung, their 1-year-old daughter, Miju, and the family dog, Oski, who were all found dead in the Sierra National Forest on Aug. 17.
STEVEN JEFFE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES This undated image shows Jonathan Gerrish, Ellen Chung, their 1-year-old daughter, Miju, and the family dog, Oski, who were all found dead in the Sierra National Forest on Aug. 17.

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