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Found items may be Fossett clue Found items may be Fossett clue
(about 1 hour later)
Items possibly belonging to Steve Fossett, the US adventurer who vanished a year ago, have been found by hikers in California. Items possibly belonging to Steve Fossett, the US adventurer who vanished a year ago, have been found by a hiker in California.
ID cards, cash and a sweatshirt were said to be among the items found in woods in the Mammoth Lakes region of eastern California. ID cards, cash and a sweatshirt were among the items found in woods near the town of Mammoth Lakes, in a rugged eastern area of the state.
Mr Fossett, 63, vanished in September last year while on a solo flight that took off from neighbouring Nevada.Mr Fossett, 63, vanished in September last year while on a solo flight that took off from neighbouring Nevada.
The millionaire businessman was declared legally dead in February.The millionaire businessman was declared legally dead in February.
In 2002, Mr Fossett became the first person to circle the globe solo in a balloon. Wide-ranging searches had failed to find any trace of Mr Fossett or his plane following his disappearance.
World records I was wondering, why are there some ID cards and money when there was nothing else? No wallet, no bags, nothing, nothing, nothing Preston Morrow, hiker The BBC's Rajesh Mirchandani, in Los Angeles, says the items were found outside the vast area searched after Mr Fossett went missing - and also in a different direction to that in which he was thought to have flown off.
Inyo National Forest spokeswoman Nancy Upham said hikers found the items near the town of Mammoth Lakes, not far from the Nevada state line. Mammoth Lakes has an elevation of about 7,800ft (2,400 metres) and is on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada range.
Mammoth Lakes Police Chief Randy Schienle told CNN: "The ID is well-weathered. We have heavy winters up here." It is about 100 miles (160km) from where Mr Fossett began his flight.
Mammoth Lakes has an elevation of about 7,800 feet (2,400 metres) and is on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada range. Mammoth Lakes Police Chief Randy Schienle told CNN the items were "well-weathered".
It is about 100 miles (160km) from where Mr Fossett took off. 'No wreckage'
The ID cards were reportedly issued by the Federal Aviation Administration in Illinois, Fox News reported. Sources told the news channel that the cards appeared authentic. Hiker Preston Morrow told US television he had stumbled upon the items while returning from a mountain walk on Monday.
There were no signs of wreckage from the plane. There were no signs of wreckage from the plane, said Mr Morrow, an employee at a Mammoth Lakes sporting goods store.
Exhaustive searches have so far failed to find any trace of Mr Fossett or his plane since his disappearance. "I was coming back down this really steep terrain and what caught my eye was these little (ID) cards in the dirt and the pine needles, and some $100 bills," he said.
He took off from the ranch of hotel magnate Barron Hilton, at Yerington, Nevada, on 3 September on a flight that was expected to last three hours. "I was wondering, why are there some ID cards and money when there was nothing else? No wallet, no bags, nothing, nothing, nothing," he added.
Mr Fossett had about 100 world records to his name. Mr Morrow said he returned the next day and found the sweatshirt in the same area but was not sure if it was related.
The missing adventurer's ID cards were reportedly issued by the Federal Aviation Administration in Illinois.
Michael LoVallo, a lawyer for Mr Fossett's wife, Peggy, said: "We are aware of the reports and are trying to verify the information."
Mr Fossett took off from the ranch of hotel magnate Barron Hilton, at Yerington, Nevada, on 3 September on a flight that was expected to last three hours.
In 2002, he became the first person to circle the globe solo in a balloon and had about 100 other world records to his name.