Woman buys her dream SoCal home. Then her son made the worst discovery imaginable
- US News
- World News
- Page Six
- Sports
- Post Sports+
- Sports Betting
- Business
- Opinion
- Entertainment
- Shopping
- Lifestyle
- Health
- Real Estate
- Alexa
- Media
- Tech
- Science
- Astrology
- Video
- Photos
- Pod Force One
- NY POSTcast
Switch between CA and NY editions here.
EditionRecommended
Skip to main content MetroWoman buys her dream SoCal home. Then her son made the worst discovery imaginable
By Nina Joudeh Published June 30, 2026, 2:11 p.m. ETSee more of our coverage in your search results.
Add The California Post on GoogleA Southern California woman’s dream home purchase turned into a nightmare when her 19-year-old son stumbled across mysterious skeletal remains buried in the backyard just days later.
The grisly discovery was made over the weekend at a home on Crest Drive in Apple Valley, despite the property having already undergone both an inspection and an appraisal before the sale, KTLA reports.
The woman, who said she is the home’s new owner, told the network her teenage son spotted the remains while outside on the property.
7
7
Deputies with the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department responded to the home Friday night into Saturday morning after receiving a report of human remains.
Explore More
Supreme Court strikes down Trump birthright citizenship order in blow to president
GOP Rep. Tom Kean Jr. reveals reason behind mysterious absence as he returns to Congress after nearly 4 months
Boyfriend desperately tried to save hiker as massive alligator ripped her apart in three feet of water
Investigators recovered multiple bones from the backyard. Authorities said there were no obvious signs of trauma, but the remains have been sent to the coroner for an autopsy. Detectives are also awaiting DNA results to identify the person.
The unsettling discovery stunned longtime neighbors Edward and Pamela Sanchez. “It’s kind of scary. We’ve never had any problems,” they said.
Neighbors explained the home had sat vacant for at least a year before it was recently purchased, though activity picked up in recent weeks.
7
7
Sign up for the California Morning Report newsletter
California's top news, sports and entertainment delivered to your inbox every day.
Thanks for signing up!
7
“There was no activity over there until we started noticing cars, and they were staging for the estate sale,” Edward Sanchez said.
“The estate sale was about two weeks ago,” Pamela Sanchez added. “Now, I’m surprised they didn’t see it then.”
The couple said an elderly husband and wife had previously lived at the property before it became vacant.
“Our neighbor down the street told me the husband passed away, and I think not long after that, the wife, I think, moved out,” Pamela Sanchez said.
7
7
The discovery has left neighbors wondering who the remains belong to.
Abraham Negret, who had been hired by the home’s new owner, said he had recently visited the property to provide an estimate before the shocking find.
“We did an estimate and I think a day later, they found something in the back,” Negret said. Although work at the home has continued, he admitted the discovery has left him uneasy.
“I feel nervous about knowing that we can find something else in that tree,” he said.
Neighbors also recalled that authorities conducted a welfare check at the home when the elderly couple still lived there, though they said that occurred at least a year ago.
The investigation remains ongoing.
Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters
California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn
California Post Sports Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X
California Post Opinion
California Post Newsletters: Sign up here!
California Post App: Download here!
Home delivery: Sign up here!
Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!
Filed under Read Next Nonverbal autistic boy, 7, who vanished from family party ...
Trending Now on NYPost.com
-
This story has been shared 53,471 times.
53,471
LeBron James quits Lakers in bombshell announcement — as fans erupt in clearly divided camps
-
This story has been shared 51,195 times.
51,195
Supreme Court strikes down Trump birthright citizenship order in blow to president
-
This story has been shared 39,944 times.
39,944
Boyfriend desperately tried to save hiker as massive alligator ripped her apart in three feet of water
Most Commented Join the conversation
-
This story has 2.1K comments.
2.1K
Trump issues dire warning about fate of Iran after punishing Islamic Republic for Strait of Hormuz attacks
-
This story has 1.7K comments.
1.7K
Supreme Court rules ballots arriving after Election Day can be counted, in win for Dems
-
This story has 1.6K comments.
1.6K
JD Vance tells Bill Maher how ‘America wins’ with or without Iran deal
Now on Page Six
-
‘Yellowstone’ creator Taylor Sheridan goes off on studio execs and eviscerates critics: ‘F–k ‘em, honestly’
-
Collin Gosselin claims estranged mom Kate would ‘pray to God to stop hitting’ him when he was 2 years old
-
Red carpet rolled out in front of MSG for Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding
Columnists
-
Rikki Schlott
Mamdani-backed DSA candidate’s win in NY-13 leaves residents reeling: ‘No real roots in the neighborhood’
-
Charles Gasparino
Legendary NYC restaurateur launching private club — where the food will be a main attraction
-
Lydia Moynihan
World Cup fans furious they were bused to post-Knicks chaos after hours stuck in tunnel, while Mamdani zipped through
See All Columnists
Image gallery
More Stories
Page Six
The surprise twist in Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding NDAs revealed
Decider
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Agent Kim Reactivated’ On Netflix, Where A Mild-Mannered Office Worker Dregs Up His Black Ops Past When His Daughter Goes Missing
NYPost
LeBron James quits Lakers in bombshell announcement — as fans erupt in clearly divided camps
© 2026 NYP Holdings, Inc. All Rights Reserved Terms of Use Subscription Terms Privacy Notice SitemapYour California Privacy Rights
Lakers Eye Jalen Duren in Free Agency Following LeBron James Departure
Lakers Eye Jalen Duren in Free Agency Following LeBron James Departure
The LeBron James era with the Los Angeles Lakers just ended, and Jalen Duren is now part of the conversation.Jayesh Pagar|
In this story:
Los Angeles LakersLeBron James just closed the book on eight years in purple and gold. His agent, Rich Paul of Klutch Sports, told the Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday that James plans to play elsewhere next season, ending speculation that had built for weeks.
That news landed hours before NBA free agency officially opened, and it changes the entire shape of the Lakers' offseason. Roster fit now revolves around Luka Doncic, not James.
One of the clearest needs on Doncic's list is a center who can finish above the rim. Detroit Pistons restricted free agent Jalen Duren fits that description, and ESPN's Dave McMenamin laid out the meeting:
"Detroit Pistons center Jalen Duren, one of the top restricted free agents this summer, has a pair of meetings with outside teams scheduled for Tuesday, when free agency officially begins. One of the teams is the Los Angeles Lakers, a source familiar with the situation told ESPN."
That interest makes sense given the season Duren just put together. He averaged 19.5 points on 65 percent shooting with 10.5 rebounds and 2.0 assists, earning his first All-Star nod and a spot on the All-NBA third team while helping Detroit finish as the top seed in the East.
The fit with Doncic is easy to see on paper. Duren is an athletic, rim-running lob threat at 6-foot-10 and 250 pounds, exactly the kind of vertical spacing a guard who thrives on pick and roll wants next to him. He also gives the Lakers the size they have lacked, a big body capable of holding up on the defensive end against the West's deeper frontcourts.
Deandre Ayton remains the Lakers' only true center for now after picking up his $8.1 million option.
Pistons Stance Could Block Lakers' Pursuit of Duren

The bigger obstacle has nothing to do with this offer alone. Detroit also holds Duren's Bird rights, giving the Pistons the ability to offer more years and more guaranteed money than any rival team, including the Lakers.
That financial edge hasn't closed the gap. Chris Haynes of NBA TV reported that Duren and the Pistons remain a sizable distance apart in negotiations, which has pushed him to explore a sign-and-trade out of Detroit at the start of free agency.
If the Lakers sign Duren to an offer sheet, Detroit still gets 48 hours to match it. That window would tie up Los Angeles financially while the rest of the roster waits to be addressed, leaving little room to fill out the supporting cast Doncic will need around him.
With Detroit holding firm and Duren looking elsewhere, Sacramento has emerged as the more realistic landing spot. Sam Amick of The Athletic reported the Kings might be exploring a sign-and-trade centered on Domantas Sabonis.
James leaving clears the path for the Lakers to build fully around Doncic, but landing Duren still runs through Detroit. Tuesday's meeting is a starting point, not a guarantee, and the next 48 hours after any offer will tell the real story.
Sign up to our free newsletter and follow us on YouTube, Facebook, X/Twitter and Instagram for the latest news.
Published 5 minutes ago
JAYESH PAGARJayesh Pagar is currently pursuing Sports Journalism from the London School of Journalism and brings four years of experience in sports media coverage. He has contributed extensively to NBA, WNBA, college basketball, and college football content.
Follow jay_onsi_knicksHome/Rumors
Ford's AI experiment backfires as car giant rehires humans
Ford has admitted its push to rely heavily on AI fell short, revealing it has hired hundreds of veteran engineers after concluding the technology alone could not deliver the quality improvements it expected.
The US automaker has hired more than 350 veteran engineers over the past three years to help address quality problems that have cost the company billions of dollars.
Ford, however, insisted it is not abandoning AI and said the improvements have come from combining the technology with decades of engineering expertise.
'This reorg allowed us to look at the entire lifecycle of a vehicle – from software development to suppliers on our plant floor - as one continuous and collaborative flow,' a Ford spokesperson told the Daily Mail.
'At the same time, we have rallied the whole company around a clear vision: Quality Comes First. We've built a culture of relentless problem-solving and recognizing our teams when they prevent issues from reaching customers.
'Using AI is just a small part of this. One tool in a toolbox and culture that relies on experience and expertise as it does modern manufacturing tools.'
The so-called 'gray beard' engineers - many of them former Ford employees or recruits from suppliers - were brought in to reprogram the company's AI tools and tackle quality problems that have cost Ford billions of dollars.
'Artificial intelligence is a fantastic tool, but it's only as good as the information you use to train it,' Charles Poon, Ford's vice president of vehicle hardware engineering, told Bloomberg and other reporters on a call Wednesday.
Ford has admitted its push to rely heavily on AI fell short, revealing it has hired hundreds of veteran engineers after concluding the technology alone could not deliver the quality improvements it expected
Chief operating officer Kumar Galhotra told the outlet the company implemented mandatory meetings to troubleshoot quality issues and reprogrammed AI tools to identify glitches before they occur
The US automaker has hired more than 350 veteran engineers over the past three years to help address quality problems that have cost the company billions of dollars
'Over prior years, we didn't pay as much attention as we should have to the experience of our most knowledgeable engineers that have been with us through many product cycles.'
Chief operating officer Kumar Galhotra told the outlet the company implemented mandatory meetings to troubleshoot quality issues and reprogrammed AI tools to identify glitches before they occur.
Galhotra acknowledged Ford's reliance on automated quality systems alone did not produce the 'desired results,' prompting the automaker to bring back technical specialists to 'hunt for failure points before a part ever reaches the plant floor.'
Ford says pairing experienced engineers with its AI tools has helped improve vehicle quality.
'We're seeing our warranty coverages come down. We're seeing our recall costs come down,' Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley said Thursday on Bloomberg TV.
'These are all contributing to literally hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars of a tailwind for Ford on cost.'
The company also remains on track to achieve its goal of cutting $1 billion in costs this year.
Ford learned that AI could not replace the expertise accumulated by longtime engineers.
Ford says pairing experienced engineers with its AI tools has helped improve vehicle quality
Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley said the company is seeing warranty and recall costs decline, helping drive hundreds of millions of dollars in savings
Read More
Timothée Chalamet's favorite EV maker fights for survival as it slashes 18% of staff and loses ANOTHER key executive

'Mistakenly, we thought that by just introducing artificial intelligence and ingesting the design requirements that we had, that that would produce a high-quality product,' Poon said.
He added that the only way to get the most out of the company's automation, machine learning and AI tools is to ensure 'they were trained by the most experienced individuals.'
The strategy appears to have paid off. Ford climbed to the top of J.D. Power's closely watched Initial Quality Study among mainstream brands, finishing ahead of rivals Toyota and Honda and behind only luxury brands Porsche and Genesis overall.
The result marked a significant turnaround after Ford ranked 10th among mainstream brands and below the industry average in last year's survey.
Three Ford models - the F-150 pickup, Super Duty truck and Mustang sports car - ranked highest in their respective categories.
Ford nevertheless remains the most recalled automaker in the US despite the improved quality rankings. The company said it expects about $1 billion in warranty and material costs this year.
Galhotra said recalls are a 'lagging indicator' of vehicle quality and predicted they would decline as newer models reach customers.
By focusing on preventing issues 'upfront,' he said Ford expects recall numbers to 'steadily come down with the newer vehicles.'