They checked into the park on July 12th, leaving Sarah’s car at a ranger station before heading out for what they planned to be a four-day backpacking trip. Their chosen route was ambitious: the Mist Trail, cutting toward Little Yosemite Valley, with a detour toward the Merced Lake High Sierra Camp. They carried enough food for a week, a map, and Michael’s GPS device.
The last confirmed sighting came from a family of hikers near Nevada Fall who recalled the trio laughing, taking photos, and debating whether to push further before sundown. That was on July 13th.
When they failed to return by July 16th, Sarah’s mother reported them missing. Rangers and volunteers launched one of the largest search-and-rescue operations Yosemite had seen in years. Helicopters scanned the valleys, drones flew over ridges, and search dogs scoured trails. For weeks, the park buzzed with activity, yet not a single clue surfaced—no backpacks, no footprints, no tent remnants. It was as if the three young adults had been swallowed by the wilderness.
Speculation quickly filled the void. Some believed they had fallen into the Merced River and been swept away, their bodies lodged in inaccessible crevices. Others whispered about foul play, pointing to cases where hikers had been robbed or assaulted along remote trails. Michael’s family, devastated but practical, leaned toward a tragic accident. Sarah’s parents clung to the hope she had simply gotten lost and might still be alive somewhere.
But after six weeks, the official search was called off. The case faded into the growing archive of Yosemite disappearances, a tragic reminder of how quickly nature can turn fatal. For the families, though, the lack of closure was unbearable. Year after year, they returned on anniversaries, walking the trails where their children had last been seen, laying flowers, and asking questions that had no answers.
Seven years passed with silence. Until one hot August afternoon, when a group of weekend campers stumbled upon something that would finally begin to unravel the mystery..
The summer of 2016 was supposed to be one last adventure before adulthood. Michael Reynolds, 22, had just graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in environmental science. His best friend since high school, Ryan Walker, 23, was an engineering student who loved rock climbing, and Sarah Mitchell, 22, a journalism major, had a habit of documenting every trip with her DSLR camera. They were inseparable, and Yosemite National Park felt like the perfect place for their final summer getaway before careers, internships, and the grind of real life scattered them apart.
They checked into the park on July 12th, leaving Sarah’s car at a ranger station before heading out for what they planned to be a four-day backpacking trip. Their chosen route was ambitious: the Mist Trail, cutting toward Little Yosemite Valley, with a detour toward the Merced Lake High Sierra Camp. They carried enough food for a week, a map, and Michael’s GPS device.