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Boy in viral hug photo missing after family's car plunges off cliff

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A Washington family was killed after their SUV plunged 100 feet off a coastal highway in California, landing on its roof in the Pacific Ocean, officials said Wednesday.
The California Highway Patrol received 911 calls Wednesday about a vehicle that went over the side of Highway 1 in a remote section of Mendocino County, about 180 miles north of San Francisco, Sgt. Erich Paarsch told reporters Wednesday. A passerby happened to see the SUV at the bottom of the cliff.
Emergency responders found the vehicle on its roof with the two women, both 38, inside the car, Paarsch said. Outside the car, they found the bodies of Markis Hart, 19, and Jeremiah Hart and Abigail Hart, both 14.
The family was not wearing seat belts, Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman said.
Investigators are still looking for the bodies of Devonte and his sisters Hannah, 16, and Sierra, 12. The sheriff’s office is working with the Coast Guard to search for the children.
The famous photo of Devonte from 2014 showed him with tears streaming down his face as he embraced a white police officer in the middle of a demonstration over the police shooting in Ferguson, Missouri.
He was holding a sign offering « free hugs » when Portland police Sgt. Bret Barnum approached and extended his hand because he saw Devonte crying. Barnum said the two talked about life, travel and summer vacations before he asked Devonte for a hug.
The sheriff Wednesday said there is every indication that all six children were in the SUV, though he said there is a possibility the three missing children could have been left with friends.
Allman pleaded with the public for any information about the family’s whereabouts 24 hours before the crash.
A complicating factor is that investigators don’t know when the SUV plunged over the cliff, the sheriff said. The vehicle was in the water for at least several hours before it was discovered, he said, based on the water found inside the SUV and in the wheel well.
The vehicle had to travel about 75 to 100 feet on a dirt « turn-out » next to the highway before it went off the edge, he said. The turn-out is a place where cars and motor homes can park and people can walk their dogs. There is a dirt berm at the spot but no guardrail.
There were no skid or brake marks, Allman said. It’s not clear whether the SUV might have rolled or launched over the edge, CHP Sgt. Christopher Dalin said.
« We have no evidence and no reason to believe this was an intentional act, » Allman said. « If this was an intentional act, I truly believe that both between the Highway Patrol and the sheriff’s office we are going to come to that conclusion, and if we come to that conclusion you can be assured that information will be released to the public. »
The family was from Woodland, Washington. The local sheriff’s office in Clark County searched the home and said it appeared the family may have been on a temporary trip because there were many belongings inside, along with a pet and some chickens.

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