
In autumn 2021, a hiker named Daniel Reeves stumbled upon a rusted school bus deep in Oregon’s Rogue River-Siskiyou Forest. Inside were haunting remnants — torn seats, decayed shoes, and yearbooks from the missing Class of 1999. Authorities soon confirmed the presence of human remains, revealing a scene of struggle: blood on broken glass, a forced exit, and scorch marks on the floor.
The most chilling find was a journal belonging to class president Amy Carlson. Her final entry read, “Something is watching us. I don’t know if we’ll make it out.”
FBI and forensic teams reopened the decades-old case. Some families finally received closure, while others still wait — thirteen students remain missing. Theories range from a road collapse to foul play, even supernatural causes whispered by locals.
The forest, dense and unforgiving, guards its secrets well. Twenty-two years after their disappearance, the bus tells part of the story — but not all. Somewhere among the pines, the rest of the truth still waits to be found.