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6 bodies are found at a remote Mojave Desert crossroads

caption: A still image taken from video provided courtesy of KABC-TV, shows Victorville sheriff's spokesperson Mara Rodriguez talks to the media during a news conference in Victorville, Calif., on Wednesday.
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A still image taken from video provided courtesy of KABC-TV, shows Victorville sheriff's spokesperson Mara Rodriguez talks to the media during a news conference in Victorville, Calif., on Wednesday.
AP

EL MIRAGE, Calif. — Deputies found the bodies of six people at a remote dirt crossroads in the Mojave Desert, a scene described as so grisly that Southern California TV stations blurred some of the images captured by their helicopters overhead.

San Bernardino County Sheriff's deputies responding to a request for a wellness check reached the area off Highway 395 outside the community of El Mirage around 8:15 p.m. Tuesday and found five of the bodies. The sixth was found Wednesday morning, sheriff's spokesperson Mara Rodriguez said.

Authorities were still gathering evidence to determine what happened, and Rodriguez said they could not say even how the people died or whether they had been shot. The area, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northeast of Los Angeles and about 20 miles (32 kilometers) northwest of Victorville, is so remote that the San Bernardino Sheriff's Department called in help from the California Highway Patrol's Aviation Division to find the scene, Rodriguez said.

"It'll be several hours still before we are ready for any body to be removed from the scene," she said, adding that the coroner's investigators will be called in then.

TV crews arriving Tuesday night reported seeing two vehicles at the crime scene. Overhead footage from TV stations showed a dark blue SUV with a passenger window blown out and another door open, with part of the image blurred.

The footage showed numerous yellow evidence markers near the dirt crossroads, in scrubby desert land that stretched for miles. Yellow tape blocked access from the nearest paved road.

Members of the department's specialized investigations division were brought in to conduct a homicide investigation, according to an email from sheriff's spokeswoman Gloria Huerta. [Copyright 2024 NPR]

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