Mountain skeleton may be man from Japanese internment camp

In this selfie shot taken Oct. 7, 2019, Brandon Follin, left, and Tyler Hofer, right, stand atop Mount Williamson, California’s second-highest peak. Earlier that day, the two had discovered a human skeleton buried in the rocks below the summit. Inyo County investigators are trying to identify the bones and, among other possibilities are looking into whether they are the remains of Giichi Matsumura, a Japanese man who was buried there in September 1945 after dying on fishing trip while he was incarcerated at the nearby Manzanar internment camp. The gravesite wasn’t mapped, so his final resting place has been a mystery that for years has captivated hikers who searched fruitlessly for Matsumara’s remains. (Brandon Follin via AP)

In this photo taken Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2019, Joan Busby looks at a transparency of where her mother found human remains in 1945 of Giichi Matsumura on Mount Williamson, at her home in Mill Valley, Calif. A burial party from Manzanar internment camp ascended the mountain, located the body, buried it and left a small pile of granite slabs to mark the grave. The Inyo County sheriff’s office told The Associated Press it is investigating the possibility that the bones found in October 2019 are those of Matsumura. The gravesite wasn’t mapped, so his final resting place has been a mystery that for years has captivated hikers who searched fruitlessly for Matsumara’s remains. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

File - In this May 23, 1943, file photo, an American soldier guards a Japanese internment camp at Manzanar, Calif. A human skeleton retrieved from California’s second-highest mountain, Mount Williamson, in October 2019, may be the remains of a Japanese-American man who died in 1945 as part of a fishing party from the Manzanar internment camp. The Inyo County Sheriff’s Department says that is among the possibilities being investigated after the bones were discovered Oct. 7 by two hikers. (AP Photo/File)

SANTA MONICA, Calif. — In the closing days of World War II, a Japanese American set out with other men from the infamous internment camp at Manzanar on a trip to the mountains, where he went off on his own to paint a watercolor and got caught in a freak summer snowstorm.