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There are certain radio channels in search and rescue operations that teams won't use. Channel 19 on the SAR radio system, designated for emergency coordination in the Cascade Mountains of Washington State, is one of them. On August 17, 2002, SAR coordinator Jennifer Walsh received a transmission on Channel 19 during a mission for missing climber David Chen. Male voice. Calm. Clear. Exact coordinates: "North 48 degrees, 44 minutes, 12 seconds. West 121 degrees, 10 minutes, 33 seconds. Altitude 7,200 feet. Subject located." Nobody on Walsh's team had transmitted those coordinates. Nobody was even monitoring Channel 19. But the coordinates were accurate to within 50 feet. They found Chen alive. Three days later, the state SAR coordinator sent a message: "Channel 19 is reserved. Teams do not transmit on Channel 19. Teams do not respond to Channel 19 transmissions. No exceptions." On June 14, 2009, SAR member Lisa Hoffman heard a transmission on Channel 19 during a search for two missing hikers. Female voice. Young. Distressed. "Hello? Can anyone hear me? We're lost. We don't know where we are. Please help." Hoffman recognized the voice—one of the missing hikers. She tried to respond. Her team leader ordered her to stop: "Channel 19 is reserved. You do not respond." The transmission continued for twenty minutes, describing a location near a creek with a rock face. When SAR found the hikers two hours later, they were exactly where the voice described. But the hikers had no radio. They'd left it in their car. On March 22, 2017, new SAR volunteer Kevin Martinez responded to a Channel 19 transmission during a mission. Male voice. Urgent. "Field Team Charlie, this is Mobile Command. Subject is west of your position." Martinez followed the instructions. His radio went dead. He was found six hours later, three miles west, with no memory of what happened. He was removed from SAR permanently. For twenty-two years, Channel 19 has been broadcasting. Transmissions come through. Voices. Coordinates. Calls for help. Sometimes accurate. Sometimes they lead SAR teams to missing people. Sometimes they lead them nowhere. And SAR teams won't use it. Won't respond. Won't investigate who's transmitting. This is the story of Channel 19. And why search and rescue teams won't use it. --- ⚠️ THE PROTOCOL: SAR teams in the Cascade region are told: Channel 19 is reserved for special operations Do not monitor Channel 19 Do not transmit on Channel 19 Do not respond to Channel 19 transmissions Violations may result in removal from SAR service No explanation given. When new volunteers ask why Channel 19 can't be used, they're told: "Because that's the protocol." SAR operations manual mentions Channel 19 once: "Channel 19: Reserved for special operations. SAR teams do not monitor Channel 19. SAR teams do not transmit on Channel 19. SAR teams do not respond to Channel 19 transmissions. Violations of this protocol may result in removal from SAR service." No other radio channel in the entire Cascade SAR system has that designation. --- 🗺️ RELATED LOCATIONS: Channel 19 is part of a pattern. Multiple SAR/ranger protocols exist across wilderness areas with similar unexplained restrictions following rules they won't explain. --- #searchandrescue #channel19 #SARstories #radiomystery #unexplainedtransmissions #emergencyradio #SARhorror #forbiddenfrequency #SARprotocols #missingtime #ghostradio #CascadeMountains #Washington #radioanomaly #SARradio #unauthorizedtransmissions #channelstillbroadcasting #documentaryhorror #truehorrorstories #wildernesshorror #emergencyservicesmysteries #SARsecrets #SARwontuseChannel --- DISCLAIMER: This video presents a fictional narrative inspired by real SAR radio protocols, actual emergency frequency anomalies, and documented missing time incidents. While Cascade Mountain SAR teams exist and operate in Washington State, the specific Channel 19 incidents described are dramatized for entertainment purposes. The protocols described (channel restrictions, transmission prohibitions, enforcement procedures) are based on real emergency communications management, though specific reasons given are fictionalized. Real SAR teams follow strict radio protocols for legitimate operational and safety reasons. If you're lost or injured in wilderness areas, call 911 immediately. Real SAR teams work tirelessly to find missing persons and save lives. Real SAR information: nasar.org Welcome to Whispering Pines Horror 🌲🔥 – your campfire in the dark. New stories every week – subscribe so you never miss a tale from the woods: 👉 / @whisperingpineshorror --- This video is fictional horror entertainment. All characters, ranger accounts, protocols, and incidents depicted are entirely fictional. Any resemblance to actual persons, locations, or events is coincidental. This content is not affiliated with or endorsed by the National Park Service or any government agency.