Mountain man scares owners of remote Utah cabins

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by ColtCarbine, Feb 25, 2012.


  1. ColtCarbine

    ColtCarbine Monkey+++ Founding Member

    Mountain man scares owners of remote Utah cabins

    He's eluded authorities for more than five years, a mountain man who roams the wilderness of southern Utah, breaking into remote cabins in winter, living in luxury off hot food, alcohol and coffee before stealing provisions and vanishing into the woods.

    SALT LAKE CITY — He's eluded authorities for more than five years, a mountain man who roams the wilderness of southern Utah, breaking into remote cabins in winter, living in luxury off hot food, alcohol and coffee before stealing provisions and vanishing into the woods.

    Investigators have clawed for clues, scouring cabins for fingerprints that match no one and chasing reports of brief encounters only to come up short, always a step behind the mysterious recluse.

    They've found abandoned camps, dozens of guns, high-end outdoor gear stolen from the homes and trash strewn around the forest floor.

    But the man authorities say is armed and dangerous and responsible for more than two dozen burglaries has continued to outrun the law across a swath of mountains not far from Zion National Park. He's roamed across 1,000 square miles of rugged wilderness where snow can pile 10 feet deep in winter.

    And while there have been no violent confrontations, detectives say he's a time bomb. Lately he has been leaving the cabins in disarray and riddled with bullets after defacing religious icons, and a recent note left behind in one cabin warned, "Get off my mountain."

    "You wouldn't want to come across that guy," said Iron County Det. Jody Edwards, who has been working the case since 2007.

    Theories about his identity have ranged from two separate men on the FBI's Most Wanted List - one sought for the 2004 killing of an armored-truck guard in Phoenix, another for killing his wife and two children in Arizona. Some have also speculated the man may be a castaway from the nearby compounds of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, the polygamous sect run by jailed leader Warren Jeffs.
    The FBI recently discounted the theory that the man was the fugitive sought in the armored-truck guard killing after authorities got the first pictures of him from a motion-triggered surveillance camera outside a cabin. The photos showing a sandy-haired man in camouflage on snowshoes, a rifle slung over his shoulder, were taken sometime in December.

    "We believe that is not Jason Derek Brown," FBI special agent Manuel Johnson told The Associated Press.

    Edwards wasn't so quick to rule out the possibility, given the close resemblance to the 42-year-old Brown, who was raised Mormon and is a highly educated, well-traveled avid outdoorsman.

    Johnson said the FBI has considered the possibility that the cabin burglar may be Robert William Fisher, described as a survivalist, hunter and angler who authorities say killed his family then blew up their house in Scottsdale, Ariz., in 2001. However, at 50 years old, Johnson is doubtful it's the man in the surveillance photos, who appears much younger.

    So while detectives believe they are getting close, buoyed by the recent photos, the shadowy survivalist remains an enigma. No missing person report appears to fit, and fingerprints lifted from cabins have yielded no match.

    Meanwhile, cabin owners are growing more frightened by the day and are left wondering who might be sleeping in their beds this winter.

    "He's scaring the daylights out of cabin owners. Now everyone's packing guns," said Jud Hendrickson, a 62-year-old mortgage advisor from nearby St. George who keeps a trailer in the area.

    In November 2010, Bruce Stucki, another cabin owner, said a burglar broke into his cabin through a narrow window, pried open a gun case with a crowbar and laid out the weapons but took none. At a nearby cabin, the man reportedly took only the grips from gun handles.

    "He could stand in the trees and pop you off and no one would know who killed you," Stucki said.

    Some cabins he has left tidy and clean, while others he has practically destroyed, even defecating in one in a pan on the floor.

    "He should know he's being followed, but I don't think this guy is normal in any way," said Stucki, who, like many cabin owners, has a lot of his own theories.

    "He's anti-religious, waiting for the mothership to come in," Stucki speculated.

    Investigators say they have found several of the man's unattended summer camps, what they initially thought were left behind by "doomsday" believers preparing for some sort of apocalypse because of the remote locations and supplies like weapons, radios, batteries, dehydrated food and camping gear.

    Edwards said two camps found a few years ago were stocked with 19 guns. One of the camps also had a copy of Jon Krakauer's "Into the Wild," a book about a young man who died after wandering into the Alaskan wilderness to live alone off the land.

    The cabin burglar has managed to avoid being seen all but twice over the years, each time retreating into the forest.

    In recent weeks, it took detectives an entire day to reach a remote cabin after getting a report that lights had been seen on inside overnight. It turned out they were solar-powered lights on the porch, and the cabin was empty - another dead-end.

    The coffee and alcohol the survivalist favors plays into some cabin owners' assessment that he could be a castaway from the nearby twin towns of Hildale or Colorado City on the Utah-Arizona border. The so-called lost boys are said to be regularly booted from the polygamous sect there by elders looking to increase their marriage opportunities with young women.
    Unlike members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which discourages consumption of alcohol and coffee, many of the Mormon fundamentalists imbibe.

    Detectives aren't sharing their latest assessments but "we've got a lot of leads" from the surveillance photos, Edwards said. "I would say we're very close to making a positive ID on him. We just got to catch this guy."

    To cabin owners in southern Utah, he remains a spooky and menacing figure.

    "We feel like we're being subject to terrorism by this guy," Hendrickson said. "My wife says flat-out she's not going back to our trailer until they catch him."

    Nation & World | Mountain man scares owners of remote Utah cabins | Seattle Times Newspaper
     
  2. DKR

    DKR Raconteur of the first stripe

    ID'd

    Police said a fingerprint found at a burglarized cabin identified the suspect as 44-year-old Troy James Knapp.

    The Iron County Sheriff's Office was able to collect and use fingerprints from the glass window of a 2009 cabin burglary. They found a match in their criminal database, tying the prints to Knapp from an arrest for theft in California in 2000, police said.
    Images of Knapp are rare. However, police were able to double-check that they had their man by matching an old mugshot of Knapp, who has distinctive tattoos, to images of a man caught on a wildlife camera after a burglary.
    Identifying the elusive burglar is only half the challenge. Now, police need to find him, and they're hoping his parents' phone will yield clues.
    Investigators obtained a court order earlier this month, allowing them to track the phone of Knapp's parents, Bruce and Barbara Knapp, who live in Moscow, Idaho. Detectives will only be able to to pinpoint the location and duration of calls, but they're hoping it will lead them to Knapp, who reportedly told a parole officer in California that he called his mother from "time to time".
    Knapp has been charged first-degree felony aggravated burglary, two counts of third-degree felony burglary and one count of third-degree felony possession of a firearm by a restricted person.
     
    ColtCarbine likes this.
  3. Seawolf1090

    Seawolf1090 Retired Curmudgeonly IT Monkey Founding Member

    I eagerly await the news reporting this criminal idiot getting a 'third eye', for breaking into an armed owner's cabin.
     
    ColtCarbine likes this.
  4. Tikka

    Tikka Monkey+++

    His type would observe to avoid contact. If there is any sign of life he beats feet.

    Hunting him with thermal imaging? ;)
     
  5. Seawolf1090

    Seawolf1090 Retired Curmudgeonly IT Monkey Founding Member

    I'm 'old school'...... DOGS!

    "Smithers, release the hounds!" :D
     
    ColtCarbine likes this.
  6. chelloveck

    chelloveck Diabolus Causidicus

    Dogs vs thermal imagers...dogs bite!

    There is nothing that increases the pucker factor for miscreants than the sound of a pack of ...hungry...dogs, on his tail baying for his blood! A thermal imager just doesn't have that kind of primal affect. I think that there's probably room for both technologies...it doesn't have to be an either / or proposition...I believe that they are both complementary.
     
  7. larryinalabama

    larryinalabama Monkey++

    Rural Utah I know for a fact tends to take care of itself.......Government is not necessary for this situation.
     
  8. Seawolf1090

    Seawolf1090 Retired Curmudgeonly IT Monkey Founding Member

    Down here, it gives the "dog hunters" (for deer) some more sport in the off-season........ ;)

    Our FWC guys do have a nifty little twin-engined aircraft with FLIR technology they are proud of. They'd have this yahoo rounded up in no time. But then, we don't have those pesky mountains to botch things up...... :D
     
    larryinalabama likes this.
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