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A tragic incident occurred on Sunday when a young mother drowned after being carried away by the strong currents at a river crossing near a well-known hiking trail in Southern California. This heartbreaking event took place as a mountain rescue team was actively advising hikers on safety precautions due to hazardous conditions.
The San Dimas Mountain Rescue Team was stationed at the Bridge to Nowhere trailhead in the East Fork of the San Gabriel River within Angeles National Forest around 8 a.m., providing crucial safety advice to hikers. Suddenly, the situation took a dire turn.
“A distressed runner came rushing up the trail, shouting for assistance,” the team reported in a news release. “A young mother had been swept away by the powerful river current at the second crossing.”
“What we feared the most had unfortunately become reality,” they added.

The rescue team later confirmed that the woman had been found deceased after being carried away by the swollen waters of the San Gabriel River on March 1, 2026.
An urgent rescue operation was launched immediately, with multiple agencies responding. The Los Angeles County Fire Department, Air Operations, the LASD Aero Bureau, and the San Dimas Sheriff’s Station all participated in the effort.
Crews located the woman after an extensive search. She was pronounced deceased, and the mission shifted to a recovery operation. The woman’s identity has not been released.

The flooded East Fork of the San Gabriel River is seen near the confluence with the river’s West Fork in an undated photo. (iStock)
Rescuers said they later assisted the woman’s grieving family at the command post.
“All we could offer were hugs, water, shade, and our presence in their darkest moment,” the rescue team said. “No words can fix this kind of loss.”
Officials warned that recent conditions have made the East Fork especially dangerous, with swift, high water and multiple required river crossings along the Bridge to Nowhere Trail.

A view of the Bridge to Nowhere trail set against the San Gabriel Mountains in Angeles National Forest, California. (iStock)
Authorities are urging hikers to avoid the area until water levels significantly drop.
“Turn around if the water looks too fast or too deep,” rescuers said. “Your life is worth more than any hike.”
Angeles National Forest is located northeast of Los Angeles.
