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Police search home of family in California cliff plunge for clues about motive, missing kids
Three other children — Devonte, 15, Hannah, 16, and Sierra, 12 — have not been found, but are presumed dead, officials said.
On Sunday, authorities said the crash might have been intentional.
The affidavit notes that police were alerted to the crash on March 26, just before 4 p.m. PST (7 p.m. ET), after a German tourist contacted authorities and reported a brown vehicle on its roof down an embankment, according to the affidavit.
Almost two hours later, according to the report, California Highway Patrol officers arrived on scene and located Sarah Hart trapped between the roof and the rear seats of the family’s GMC Yukon. Jennifer Hart was still located in the driver’s seat, with the speedometer “pinned” at 90 mph.
Officers said this meant the vehicle was running and in motion prior to impact, but said it is unclear how fast the car was going when it crashed.
A CHP spokesman told reporters that the GMC Yukon’s on-board computer indicated that the vehicle stopped and then suddenly accelerated off off the highway — plunging about 70 feet down to the rocky shoreline of the Pacific Ocean.
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Three children were found ejected from the vehicle when police arrived, but as of Monday, Devonte, Hannah and Sierra had still not been located.
Devonte, a young black boy, was photographed in 2014 crying in the arms of a white police officer during a protest in Oregon over the police shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri. That image went viral and has been referred to as the “hug that was felt around the world.”
“Three children are still missing and could be in the ocean,” Acting Assistant CHP Chief Greg Baarts said. “We are trying to determine a timeline, path of travel, and if there were any stops.”

He said California authorities were “tirelessly searching for the missing children along the coastline,” while authorities in California and Washington were “conducting interviews and attempting to establish a timeline and routes of travel in an effort to rule out any other possibilities.”
The family had a troubled past, according to neighbors and court records. Sarah Hart was charged with a misdemeanor offense of domestic assault against her daughter Abigail in 2011 and child Protective Services had visited the household.
Neighbors have said Devonte would ask them for food, saying his parents withheld it as a punishment.
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Myanmar: More than 80 dead after being fired on by rifle grenades in violent clashes over military coup | World News
More than 80 people have been killed by rifle grenades in yet more violent clashes between the military and protesters in Myanmar.
Bodies were piled up in a pagoda in the town of Bago after Myanmar security forces opened fire on a protest against the 1 February military coup in the country.
The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) monitoring group said it believed there were 82 dead.
Protest organiser Ye Htut told news outlet Myanmar Now: “It is like genocide.
“They are shooting at every shadow.”
Many residents of the town 55 miles (90km) northeast of Yangon have fled, according to social media.
Myanmar’s military seized power in a coup in February, forcing elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi into detention.
Heavy clashes have erupted between protesters and the ruling junta – which has cut internet connections, imposed a curfew and a law banning more than five people from congregating in an effort to stop demonstrations that have sprung up since the takeover.
Some members of security forces have used extreme violence, driving tanks into major cities and opening fire on the crowds.
The military said it staged the coup because a November election won by Aung San Suu Kyi’s party was rigged – an assertion dismissed by the election commission.
The reports of killings in Bago come less than a week after the AAPP said that at least 43 children died in violence since the takeover.
More than 600 people have died in total, according to AAPP, a figure disputed by the military.
Junta spokesman Major General Zaw Min Tun told a news conference on Friday in the capital, Naypyitaw, the military had recorded 248 civilian deaths and 16 police deaths – and said no automatic weapons had been used by security forces.
Meanwhile, an alliance of ethnic armies that has opposed the junta’s crackdown attacked a police station in the east on
Saturday and at least 10 policemen were killed, domestic media said.
The police station at Naungmon in Shan state was attacked early in the morning by fighters from an alliance that includes the Arakan Army, the Ta’ang National Liberation Army and the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, it was reported.
Latest News
Mozambique: Stark pictures tell horrifying tale of three days under terrorist fire | World News
Pictures shared with Sky News, taken by survivors of the Palma terror attack in Mozambique, give a graphic illustration of a terrifying three days under fire, surrounded by insurgents.
Nearly 200 people – including foreign workers – took refuge in one of the town’s hotels.
But survivors have told Sky News how they fled for their lives because they felt they’d been abandoned and no one was coming to rescue them.
One South African contractor spoke of almost constant shooting and shelling during the three days they were trapped inside the Amarula Lodge in Palma.
Wesley Nel filmed on his mobile phone throughout and his footage shows those pinned down in the Lodge – including his brother Adrian and father Greg – lying on the floor of the hotel’s upstairs restaurant as a volley of gunfire is heard.
“The gunfire just didn’t stop,” Mr Nel said.
“The mortars – you’re talking about 100’s of mortars going off… probably 40 to 50 an hour. We counted them.
“And it went on constantly for three, four days.
“They [the insurgents] must have been stockpiling tonnes of ammunition nearby or in the town for months before.”
Mr Nel, his father and brother were sub-contracted to work on the huge multi-billion-dollar LNG (liquified natural gas) project being developed on the Afungi Peninsula near to Palma.
They had been told, despite militant unrest around the northern Cabo Delgado Province since 2017, that the town of Palma was secure and stable.
But when, on 24 March, the insurgents mounted their most audacious attack so far, it seemed to take the military and the police completely off-guard.
British contractor Philip Mawer, went missing in the melee and a body was later found matching his description.
A week after the attack, Islamic State extremists said they had carried out the attack. But little is known about the group called ISIS Mozambique (also known locally as al Shabaab).
Many analysts believe the ISIS flag is simply one of convenience with many more complex layers at the heart of the insurgency including geo-political rivalries over Africa’s largest oil and gas investment as well as discontent over economic inequalities in the country.
The vast natural resources are just off the coast of Mozambique’s poorest province.
The Palma attack was vicious, brutal and appeared to have a level of planning. It came only hours after the French gas giant Total announced it was resuming work on the LNG project after months of hiatus over security concerns.
When shooting broke out in the town, the foreign workers who were stationed near to the lodge headed straight there.
It was considered secure and had high perimeter walls and a helicopter landing pad for airlifts.
“We, 100% thought we were going to get out by helicopter [on the first day of the terror attack],” Mr Nel said.
But he said only helicopters manned by the private security company DAG appeared to mount any rescue attempt.
DAG’s small helicopters could only airlift six people at a time. Women, children and the sick were loaded on first with more than 20 being taken to safety in Pemba.
But with light fading and fuel running out, the controversial security company which had only weeks earlier been accused of war crimes by human rights groups, halted its rescue mission.
The civilians trapped inside the Amarula Lodge used the satellite phones they had among them, to appeal for help from the Mozambican military, from their employers, from anyone.
“We said to them, we’re sitting ducks… we’ve got nothing to protect ourselves,” Mr Nel told Sky News.
The footage shows the group left behind in the hotel still appearing to believe there would be further attempts to take them out of what was now a battle zone.
They are filmed sitting and standing around with small bags ready to flee. But the help never came.
“We knew the insurgents were getting closer,” said Mr Nel. “It was only a matter of time before they breached the gates and we were slaughtered.”
In desperation, his elder brother Adrian hatched a plan to run out of the lodge gates to try to recover a weapon they believed had been hidden in one of the parked vehicles outside.
It took him three runs to find it. You can hear his brother Wesley urging him on as he films him tearing across the road.
“Come on Adrian, come on!” he can be heard saying.
“Ordinarily he’d have got a medal of honour,” his brother said.
But with just a single weapon between them, and some abandoned flak jackets left behind in the hotel by aid agencies, the group decided to organise a convoy of vehicles, pack as many people in as possible and take their chances outside.
The mobile phone video shows the back of one pick-up truck crammed full of people waiting to bolt out of the hotel gates.
“We were determined to take everybody who wanted to go. We had four people in the boot of just our car,” Mr Nel said.
His brother Adrian opted to be one of the drivers.
“You’ve got the drive of your life bro,” his younger brother can be heard saying to him on the footage.
But only two minutes outside the gate, the convoy of 17 vehicles was ambushed.
Vehicles stopped, Mr Nel said, and there was panic and frantic running into the bush as well as into other cars.
The convoy continued with the brothers’ vehicle about fourth from the front, only to run into another ambush as militants shot at specifically the drivers from the side of the road.
Adrian was hit, twice. His brother relays what happened.
“He started shouting that he’s hit, he’s hit and his leg was off and he can’t drive… someone needs to take over…and everyone was shouting keep driving as far as you can.
“He was like, I’m trying. Probably about a kilometre after, he was saying I can’t… I’m going guys, I’m going…”
His brother pulled over to the side and when Wesley reached him, he was shaking uncontrollably. Now the younger brother took over the driving.
“I was holding his shoulder over the bullet wound trying to stop the blood and it was just pumping out,” said Mr Nel.
“I started to drive and I was just shouting back at them, to put the other doses inside the gunshot wounds to stop the bleeding.”
And all the time, his younger brother is trying to reassure him of his love.
Mr Nel breaks down as he remembers: “I was shouting that I love him and that I’d look after his family and that I’m so, so sorry that this had happened to him.”
He managed to drive the vehicle to the quarry where they were hoping helicopters might be able to land to pick them up. But still there were none.
The men fled into the thick bush nearby and camped out all night and until well into the next day before emerging.
This time they managed to reach a DAG helicopter which flew them to the nearby Afungi airstrip.
“I begged them to go back and retrieve my brother’s body,” said Wesley. “I wasn’t going to leave him there.”
The DAG team followed through on its promise, retrieved his brother’s body and with Mr Nel laying next to his dead brother in the helicopter, they were taken onto Pemba – and then flown back to South Africa.
Now he says friends and family have started crowdfunding to raise money for his brother’s young family. He leaves behind a wife and three young children.
“We did everything for everybody and it felt like no one was doing anything for us,” said Mr Nel.
“And my brother paid the ultimate price… they just abandoned us and now I’m left with this… I can’t understand why there wasn’t foreign military in there that could help us.”
There are still more than 20,000 people unaccounted for more than two weeks after the Palma terror attack.
The Mozambican authorities have sent hundreds of soldiers into the town and have declared it free of terrorists.
The Mozambican President, Felipe Nyusi has called for unity and promised a huge job creation scheme and there have been expressions of solidarity among the southern African countries which make up SADC.
But the insurgents still hold the strategically important port of Mocimboa da Praia and the challenge will be for the authorities to regain control there and crush the insurgency before it spreads further.
Latest News
Mozambique: Stark pictures tell horrifying tale of three days under terrorist fire | World News
Pictures shared with Sky News, taken by survivors of the Palma terror attack in Mozambique, give a graphic illustration of a terrifying three days under fire, surrounded by insurgents.
Nearly 200 people – including foreign workers – took refuge in one of the town’s hotels.
But survivors have told Sky News how they fled for their lives because they felt they’d been abandoned and no one was coming to rescue them.
One South African contractor spoke of almost constant shooting and shelling during the three days they were trapped inside the Amarula Lodge in Palma.
Wesley Nel filmed on his mobile phone throughout and his footage shows those pinned down in the Lodge – including his brother Adrian and father Greg – lying on the floor of the hotel’s upstairs restaurant as a volley of gunfire is heard.
“The gunfire just didn’t stop,” Mr Nel said.
“The mortars – you’re talking about 100’s of mortars going off… probably 40 to 50 an hour. We counted them.
“And it went on constantly for three, four days.
“They [the insurgents] must have been stockpiling tonnes of ammunition nearby or in the town for months before.”
Mr Nel, his father and brother were sub-contracted to work on the huge multi-billion-dollar LNG (liquified natural gas) project being developed on the Afungi Peninsula near to Palma.
They had been told, despite militant unrest around the northern Cabo Delgado Province since 2017, that the town of Palma was secure and stable.
But when, on 24 March, the insurgents mounted their most audacious attack so far, it seemed to take the military and the police completely off-guard.
British contractor Philip Mawer, went missing in the melee and a body was later found matching his description.
A week after the attack, Islamic State extremists said they had carried out the attack. But little is known about the group called ISIS Mozambique (also known locally as al Shabaab).
Many analysts believe the ISIS flag is simply one of convenience with many more complex layers at the heart of the insurgency including geo-political rivalries over Africa’s largest oil and gas investment as well as discontent over economic inequalities in the country.
The vast natural resources are just off the coast of Mozambique’s poorest province.
The Palma attack was vicious, brutal and appeared to have a level of planning. It came only hours after the French gas giant Total announced it was resuming work on the LNG project after months of hiatus over security concerns.
When shooting broke out in the town, the foreign workers who were stationed near to the lodge headed straight there.
It was considered secure and had high perimeter walls and a helicopter landing pad for airlifts.
“We, 100% thought we were going to get out by helicopter [on the first day of the terror attack],” Mr Nel said.
But he said only helicopters manned by the private security company DAG appeared to mount any rescue attempt.
DAG’s small helicopters could only airlift six people at a time. Women, children and the sick were loaded on first with more than 20 being taken to safety in Pemba.
But with light fading and fuel running out, the controversial security company which had only weeks earlier been accused of war crimes by human rights groups, halted its rescue mission.
The civilians trapped inside the Amarula Lodge used the satellite phones they had among them, to appeal for help from the Mozambican military, from their employers, from anyone.
“We said to them, we’re sitting ducks… we’ve got nothing to protect ourselves,” Mr Nel told Sky News.
The footage shows the group left behind in the hotel still appearing to believe there would be further attempts to take them out of what was now a battle zone.
They are filmed sitting and standing around with small bags ready to flee. But the help never came.
“We knew the insurgents were getting closer,” said Mr Nel. “It was only a matter of time before they breached the gates and we were slaughtered.”
In desperation, his elder brother Adrian hatched a plan to run out of the lodge gates to try to recover a weapon they believed had been hidden in one of the parked vehicles outside.
It took him three runs to find it. You can hear his brother Wesley urging him on as he films him tearing across the road.
“Come on Adrian, come on!” he can be heard saying.
“Ordinarily he’d have got a medal of honour,” his brother said.
But with just a single weapon between them, and some abandoned flak jackets left behind in the hotel by aid agencies, the group decided to organise a convoy of vehicles, pack as many people in as possible and take their chances outside.
The mobile phone video shows the back of one pick-up truck crammed full of people waiting to bolt out of the hotel gates.
“We were determined to take everybody who wanted to go. We had four people in the boot of just our car,” Mr Nel said.
His brother Adrian opted to be one of the drivers.
“You’ve got the drive of your life bro,” his younger brother can be heard saying to him on the footage.
But only two minutes outside the gate, the convoy of 17 vehicles was ambushed.
Vehicles stopped, Mr Nel said, and there was panic and frantic running into the bush as well as into other cars.
The convoy continued with the brothers’ vehicle about fourth from the front, only to run into another ambush as militants shot at specifically the drivers from the side of the road.
Adrian was hit, twice. His brother relays what happened.
“He started shouting that he’s hit, he’s hit and his leg was off and he can’t drive… someone needs to take over…and everyone was shouting keep driving as far as you can.
“He was like, I’m trying. Probably about a kilometre after, he was saying I can’t… I’m going guys, I’m going…”
His brother pulled over to the side and when Wesley reached him, he was shaking uncontrollably. Now the younger brother took over the driving.
“I was holding his shoulder over the bullet wound trying to stop the blood and it was just pumping out,” said Mr Nel.
“I started to drive and I was just shouting back at them, to put the other doses inside the gunshot wounds to stop the bleeding.”
And all the time, his younger brother is trying to reassure him of his love.
Mr Nel breaks down as he remembers: “I was shouting that I love him and that I’d look after his family and that I’m so, so sorry that this had happened to him.”
He managed to drive the vehicle to the quarry where they were hoping helicopters might be able to land to pick them up. But still there were none.
The men fled into the thick bush nearby and camped out all night and until well into the next day before emerging.
This time they managed to reach a DAG helicopter which flew them to the nearby Afungi airstrip.
“I begged them to go back and retrieve my brother’s body,” said Wesley. “I wasn’t going to leave him there.”
The DAG team followed through on its promise, retrieved his brother’s body and with Mr Nel laying next to his dead brother in the helicopter, they were taken onto Pemba – and then flown back to South Africa.
Now he says friends and family have started crowdfunding to raise money for his brother’s young family. He leaves behind a wife and three young children.
“We did everything for everybody and it felt like no one was doing anything for us,” said Mr Nel.
“And my brother paid the ultimate price… they just abandoned us and now I’m left with this… I can’t understand why there wasn’t foreign military in there that could help us.”
There are still more than 20,000 people unaccounted for more than two weeks after the Palma terror attack.
The Mozambican authorities have sent hundreds of soldiers into the town and have declared it free of terrorists.
The Mozambican President, Felipe Nyusi has called for unity and promised a huge job creation scheme and there have been expressions of solidarity among the southern African countries which make up SADC.
But the insurgents still hold the strategically important port of Mocimboa da Praia and the challenge will be for the authorities to regain control there and crush the insurgency before it spreads further.
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