Body found may be shooter of NPS Park Ranger

UPDATE at 4:10 p.m. PT, January 2, 2012

CNN is reporting that the National Park Service said the body spotted by personnel in an aircraft is confirmed to be Benjamin Colton Barnes, suspected of shooting and killing park ranger Margaret Anderson the previous day.

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Benjamin Barnes
Benjamin Barnes

Law enforcement officers searching for the person who shot and killed Park Ranger Margaret Anderson yesterday in Mount Rainier National Park in Washington state, today spotted from an aircraft a face-down body and believe it may be 24-year old Benjamin Barnes, the suspect in the fatal shooting. The thermal infrared equipment on the aircraft did not detect any heat signature on the body. It will take about two hours for officers on the ground to snowshoe to the location. Obviously, it has not been 100% confirmed that the body is that of Barnes, or that Barnes is the person who killed Ranger Anderson.

Members of a SWAT team have been snowshoeing through chest-deep snow searching for the shooter. The team was not trained or equipped for tracking a suspect in deep snow and rugged terrain, but they were outfitted by National Park Service personnel with specialized equipment and information.

More details have emerged about the shooting. Driving a vehicle, the shooter approached a checkpoint in Mount Rainier National Park at which park rangers check every vehicle to ensure they have tire chains. He failed to stop and fled in his vehicle. The ranger at the checkpoint radioed ahead to Ranger Margaret Anderson who blocked the road with her vehicle. Dan Camiccia, another ranger, also responded, and according to CNN “they confronted him together,” Camiccia said. The shooter exited the vehicle and fired multiple rounds from a shotgun at both rangers while they were still in their vehicles, fatally wounding Anderson before she had a chance to get out of her patrol vehicle. Camiccia was not hit, but when the gunman approached him, he put his vehicle in reverse and left the area.

The suspect fled into the forest through deep snow and kept responding officers at bay by shooting at them with a rifle as they attempted to assist Ranger Anderson. No one was hit by the rifle shots, but at least 90 minutes elapsed before they were able to access her location. When they reached the 34-year-old mother of two, she had died.

Inside the suspect’s abandoned vehicle, officers found multiple weapons, ammunition, body armor and survival gear.

The suspect in the murder of Anderson, Benjamin C. Barnes, is also a suspect in a shooting in a Skyway, Washington apartment that left four people injured on New Year’s Eve. It was thought that he planned to hide in the National Park after the apartment shooting.

Barnes had two restraining orders filed against him by the mother of his one-year-old child. In an affidavit, the woman wrote that Barnes was suicidal and possibly suffered from PTSD after deploying to Iraq in 2007-2008. She said he gets easily irritated, angry and depressed and keeps an arsenal of weapons in his home.

Aero Union to auction their P-3 air tankers

P-3 air tankers at Sacramento
P-3 air tankers at Sacramento's McClellan airfield. Google Earth photo, October 30, 2011

The Aero Union Corporation has listed their eight P-3 air tankers to be sold by auction. Plant and Machinery auction company is advertising the aircraft and other items totaling “$50,000,000 of aircraft, parts, and intellectual property” to be sold in a sealed bid auction. The auction site lists the following items for sale:

  • Eight Lockhead P-3 Orion Aerial Firefighting Aircraft
  • Engines, APUs, propellers, parts
  • Intellectual property, including the MAFFS II 3,000-gallon slide-in air tanker system for C-130J aircraft, and the FIREHAWK Aerial Firefighting System for Blackhawk helicopters
Aero Union P-3 at McClellan
File photo of an Aero Union P-3 at McClellan. Photo by Aero Union.

Aero Union began in Redding, California in 1960 as Western Air Industries, changed the name to Aero Union, and moved to Chico in 1964. They began acquiring military surplus P-3 Orion aircraft in 1990, beginning with two and later increasing the total to eight. In 2005 a group of investors in the Seattle area bought the company and moved it to the former McClellan Air Force Base at Sacramento in 2010. The base is now a joint civil-military airfield with various mixed-use tenants.

The U.S. Forest Service cancelled their air tanker contract with Aero Union in July of 2011, saying safety inspections were not being completed, and shortly after that the company laid off most of their employees. At the time of the cancellation six of the P-3s were still under contract and being used regularly on wildfires. Unless the condition of the aircraft has deteriorated significantly in the last six months, which is possible, they may still be very viable as air tankers. It appears that they will qualify for the U.S. Forest Service’s “new generation” air tanker contract which requires aircraft that can cruise at 300 knots, have turbine engines, and have a “target” capacity of 3,000 to 5,000 gallons.

The sealed bids will be opened February 28, 2012 at 1:00 p.m. local time at the Lions Gate Hotel at McClellan, California.

 

Thanks go out to Ken

NPS ranger shot and killed in Mt. Rainier National Park

UPDATEat 7:27 p.m. PT, January 1, 2012:

Authorities are looking for a particular individual in the shooting death of a National Park Service law enforcement ranger. Here is an excerpt from the SeattlePI:

Sources tell KOMO News that a man who is a person of interest in the shooting death of a park ranger Sunday morning near Mt. Rainier is also a suspect in a shooting that left four wounded in Skyway earlier in the day.

Detectives are looking for 24-year-old Benjamin Colton Barnes, according to a flyer being passed around by law enforcement at the scene of the shooting near Mt. Rainier.

Investigators have also recovered a car filled with weapons and body armor, along with survivalist gear, said Det. Ed Troyer with the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department. But Troyer would not say for sure yet that car belongs to Barnes.

Benjamin Colton Barnes
Benjamin Colton Barnes. Photo provided by the Pierce County Sheriff's Department. Officials said Barnes is a person of interest in the fatal shooting.

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Updated at 7:17 p.m. PT, January 1, 2012

A law enforcement ranger for the National Park Service in Washington state was shot and killed in Mount Rainier National Park today, January 1, 2012.

Margaret Anderson
Margaret Anderson. NPS photo.

Here is an excerpt from CNN:

The suspect remained at large Sunday afternoon, believed to be somewhere in the expansive park, Mount Rainier National Park spokeswoman Lee Taylor said. At this time, no video surveillance is available and authorities do not have a description of the gunman.

“It began as just a normal traffic stop” around 10:30 a.m. PT (1:30 p.m. ET), Taylor explained to CNN. But the suspect didn’t heed a request to pull over, prompting a ranger to radio ahead requesting assistance.

Park ranger Margaret Anderson, 34, responded to that call and set up her patrol vehicle as a roadblock.

“When he arrived at that spot, he got out (of his car) and fatally shot her,” said Taylor.

The suspect, who is believed to be armed, then ran into the spacious national park.

The original attempt at the traffic stop occurred near Paradise Ranger Station.
Continue reading “NPS ranger shot and killed in Mt. Rainier National Park”

Large fire in national park in Chile may have started from burning toilet paper

Fire In Torres del Paine NP
Fire In Torres del Paine NP. Photo: AFP

Authorities in Chile have accused Rotem Singer, an Israeli hiker, of accidentally starting a fire in a national park by not completely extinguishing toilet paper that he had burned. The fire in Chile’s Torres del Paine National Park has burned about 27,000 acres which is four percent of the total area of the park.

The hiker’s father, Yehezkel Singer, said his son was more than a kilometer away from the fire and the authorities who interrogated him did not speak English and Rotem does not speak Spanish, so there may have been confusion during the interrogation.

Mandi Gisser, a friend of Rotem, said Rotem burned the toilet paper because park managers request that hikers leave nothing behind. She said he is certain the toilet paper was not burning when he left it. Gisser said some locals tried to attack the Israelis as they were leaving the courthouse where Rotem’s hearing was held.

On August 30, 2011 we wrote an article about a person that admitted accidentally starting a fire in New Mexico by burning toilet paper. People who commented on the article submitted several other examples of toilet paper caused fires.
Thanks go out to Dick

Wildfire news, December 27, 2011

Texas drought has killed 10% of trees

The drought that has been affecting Texas for the last one to two years has killed approximately 10% of the trees in the state according to the Texas Forest Service, and of course has also contributed to the extremely busy fire seasons firefighters have been struggling with. The 500,000,000 dead trees are in addition to the trees killed in the wildfires across the state. These are preliminary figures and the TFS plans to confirm them in the spring with a more detailed survey. Large numbers of tough native species have died, including cedar, cedar elm, post oaks and the loblolly pines of East Texas.

Records set in Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico

The drought was aggravated by record heat, with many locations across the Southern Plains setting records for the most 100-degree days. A record number of acres burned in Texas, while Arizona and New Mexico saw their largest fires on record, the Los Conchas fire in New Mexico and the Wallow fire in Arizona.

Colorado man faces sentencing and a civil suit for starting Crystal fire

Thomas Howie, the man who started the Crystal Fire west of Fort Collins Colorado in early April, 2011, will be sentenced February 10 for the fire that burned about 3,000 acres and destroyed 13 structures. After the November trial started, Howie surprisingly pleaded guilty to one count of arson after a day of testimony during which residents told how they came close to dying as they evacuated in front of the wind-driven fire.

Using a lighter and a can of gasoline, Howie ignited a fire in a brush pile on property that was co-owned by his father and three current and former National Football League players.

Crystal Fire Map 04-05-2011
Crystal Fire Map, April 5, 2011. GeoMAC

Some of the homeowners are suing Howie to recover their losses. In response to the suit, Howie’s lawyers have argued that “a downed power line” or “intervening negligence” of firefighters caused the fire.

His sentencing for the criminal charge could include two to six years in prison.

Wildfire Today reported on the fire April 3, on April 4, and on April 5.

Red fire water for Christmas?

Bermuda fire water
Firefighters extinguish a small brush fire in St. George, Bermuda, December 22, 2011

While it may appear in the screen grab from a video that firefighters in Bermuda colored the water in their fire truck for the Christmas season, it gets its color from the flashing red and blue lights on the fire apparatus and a nearby police car. Check out the video below to see the light show as the firefighters extinguished a small brush fire.