I'm new to this group and have been lurking on this thread since the beginning of this case, when I saw it posted on Facebook. I read the rules and don't believe this is "victim unfriendly" per those definitions (I hope not!), but please let me know if so and I will delete. It just keeps niggling at me and I haven't seen it discussed anywhere. It's in service of trying to locate this man and alleviating his family's worries, but it is an unusual case because of his circumstances and the fact that he left on his own volition, per the CCTV and searches he did. The thing that struck me from the day his family was sent that photo of John on the trail is how much of an enormous coincidence that is that someone found this photo online, and I am one who thinks huge coincidences should probably be looked into further. Does anyone know if the citizen who posted that photo to Instagram has been questioned about it? The likelihood that out of the many millions of people who live or visit San Francisco, one would happen to capture a photo of a missing person that has a major landmark in the background only hours later, thereby suggesting an exact location, date, time, and supposed trajectory of the missing person, combined with that photo quickly being randomly discovered on a website with millions of photos of San Francisco, seems extremely coincidental. I also think if I were taking a photo of the bridge, I would wait for a hiker to clear out of my photo before taking my landscape shot. I could be way off base (I am so sorry if so!) and this is indeed a wild coincidence, but I'm wondering if the Instagram user has been questioned at all. He's definitely a stranger to John? Has the trail photo been examined from all angles in finding John's whereabouts?