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  • 8
    Aug
    2012
    2:17pm, EDT

    Body found on Mount Rainier could have gone missing in January

    By Vignesh Ramachandran

    Authorities on Tuesday recovered a man's body on Mount Rainier after a group of hikers discovered some clothes under rapidly melting snow a day earlier.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The body was found near a trail -- at about 8,000 feet in elevation -- at Muir Snowfield at Mount Rainier National Park. A group made the discovery as it descended from Camp Muir.


    Authorities aren't certain, but there's a "good chance" the body is connected to four missing climbers who were lost in storms in January, park spokesperson Patti Wold told NBC News. 

    The Pierce County Medical Examiner is working to identify the body. It appeared to have been "under snow for some time," Wold said in a statement.

    No other bodies were found, but the search for the climbers continues on a limited basis. Warmer weather over the next couple months could melt more snow and possibly reveal more evidence.

    The climbers were part of two separate groups lost in January: Mark Vucich, 37, of San Diego and Michelle Trojanowski, 30, of Atlanta; and Sork (Erik) Yang, 52, of Springfield, Ore. and Seol Hee Jin, 52, from South Korea, according to Seattle's NBC affiliate KING 5.

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    12 comments

    Does anyone else find the phrasing of the article title odd? "Body" could have gone missing? How about body found could have been missing climber? or anything else. Just odd phraseology.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: national-park, featured, mount-rainier, hikers, mount-rainier-national-park, camp-muir
  • 22
    Jun
    2012
    4:11am, EDT

    Park ranger falls 3,700 feet to death during Mount Rainier rescue

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Rain and snow at Mount Rainier in Washington state on Friday were preventing a helicopter from recovering the body of a national park ranger who fell 3,700 feet to his death during the rescue of four climbers. The National Park Service identified the ranger as Nick Hall. 


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Hall was on Rainier's northeast side at about 13,700 feet when he fell around 5 p.m. local time Thursday as he was helping the climbers aboard a helicopter, the service said.

    "As the first of the climbers were being evacuated by helicopter, Mount Rainier climbing ranger Nick Hall fell, sliding more than 3,000 feet down the side of the mountain," the service said in a statement.


    "He did not respond to attempts to contact him and was not moving. High winds and a rapidly lowering cloud ceiling made rescue efforts extremely difficult," the service added. "Climbers reached Ranger Hall several hours after the incident began and found him to be deceased." 

    Three of the climbers were able to be airlifted by 9 p.m. but the fourth had to spend the night on the mountain "in a safe location, with Mount Rainier National Park climbing rangers," the service stated Thursday night.

    National Park Service

    Nick Hall, far left, poses with other Mount Rainier Climbing Rangers during a training session on May 4.

    On Friday morning, the climber and two rangers started to walk down and made it to a camp at 9,500 feet by early afternoon.

    Visibility was poor Friday, with rain showers at lower elevation and snow above 10,000 feet. As a result, the helicopter was grounded and rangers hoping to get to where Hall perished were also making little progress.

    The climbers, two men and two women from Waco, Texas, had been walking on the Emmons Glacier Route on their way down from the summit when two of them slipped and fell into a crevasse, said Kevin Bacher, a park spokesman.

    One of the climbers had a working cell phone and was able to notify park rangers. Rescue crews on foot located the climbers and lifted the two out of the crevasse, then began the process of transferring the climbers to a helicopter.

    "The two women on the end went into the crevasse," Bacher said, "but the two men were able to stop the group, and that prevented anyone from falling to the bottom of the crevasse."

    All four had bruises, and possibly some broken bones, but none of the injuries seemed life-threatening, Bacher said.

    The climber still on the mountain is Stacy Wren, 22. The three hospitalized are Noelle Smith, Stuart Smith and Ross Vandyke, the park said.

    The Waco Tribune-Herald reported that Smith is a Waco attorney who has climbed the highest mountains on all seven continents and has been to both poles.

    Hall, a four-year veteran of Mount Rainier's climbing program and a native of Patten, Maine, was a former Marine sergeant and had also worked as an avalanche forecaster at Yellowstone National Park, according to his Facebook page.

    Interior Secretary Ken Salazar praised Hall as a ranger "who heroically gave his life to save others". 

    Hall's age was initially reported as 34 but later corrected to 33.

    Hall's is the second death of a Mount Rainier ranger this year. Margaret Anderson was shot dead on New Year's Day at a roadblock when she stopped a man suspected in a Seattle shooting.

    Moreover, four Rainier visitors, two climbers and two campers, are presumed dead after failing to return from the mountain in January.

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    285 comments

    How very sad that Ranger Hall lost his life trying to save the lives of others. Condolences to his family, friends and fellow park rangers.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, rescue, environment, helicopter, featured, mount-rainier, climbers, park-ranger
  • 24
    Jan
    2012
    9:59am, EST

    Search for 4 Rainier hikers 'to scale down'

    Elaine Thompson / AP

    Mount Rainer, seen at dawn on Jan. 2, is only 50 miles south of Seattle and draws thousands of hikers each year, even in winter.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    The search for four climbers and campers missing for more than a week in Washington's Mount Rainier National Park was scaled back Tuesday after three aircraft and ground teams found no sign of them Monday despite excellent search conditions, the National Park Service said.

    No search will take place Tuesday due to stormy weather, the agency said in a statement Monday night, and "the park will begin to scale down the operation."

    Two helicopters and an airplane with a heat-sensing infrared camera joined some 40 people on seven ground teams on Monday, the first day conditions were favorable for a large search.

    Rangers believe both parties were equipped for bad weather but worry they're running out of supplies.

    The climbers -- Sork Yang, 52, of Springfield, Ore., and Seol Hee Jim, 52, of South Korea -- had planned to reach Rainier's 14,411-foot summit and return on Jan. 16.

    The campers -- Mark Vucich, 37, of San Diego, Calif., and Michelle Trojanowski, 30, of Atlanta, Ga. -- planned to winter camp on the Muir Snowfield, elevation 10,000 feet, and then hike out on Jan. 15.

    Over the last week, search crews had been pushed back by gusts up to 90 mph, white-out conditions, ice-crusted snow, avalanche dangers and snow depths of between 10 to 15 feet, as well as snow drifts up to 50 feet deep.

    About 10,000 people attempt to summit the massive volcano each year, but most do so in the summer. Only a few hundred climb in the winter months.

    Elaine Thompson / AP

    Snowshoers head out on a trek at the Paradise area of Mount Raininer National Park on Jan. 7.

    A 66-year-old snowshoer was found alive last week after spending two days in blizzard conditions.

    Rainier also saw the fatal shooting of a park ranger on New Year's Day by a former Army soldier who later froze to death as he was hunted in the park.

    STORY: Rainier has its rewards, and risks

    "It's been a rough month for Mount Rainier," said Mike Gauthier, who was a climbing ranger on Rainier for two decades. "Any of these are big events. To have one immediately fall into the next one. It's not even the third week of January. It's a lot of stress on the staff."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    17 comments

    Deja Vu....... anyone?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, winter, mount-rainier
  • 19
    Jan
    2012
    4:10pm, EST

    Rescuers ascend Rainier in search for 4 missing hikers

    nps.gov

    Visibility on Mount Rainier was limited on Thursday.

    By msnbc.com staff

    Ten rescuers were making their way up Mount Rainier on Thursday, braving stormy conditions to search for four overdue campers and climbers.

    The team plans to search the intended route of the two parties by trekking from the Paradise Visitor Center to the Muir Snowfield and then to Camp Muir, where they intend to spend the night, the park service said in a statement.

    "The team is made up of highly skilled mountaineers who are familiar with the route and in mitigating associated avalanche exposure," the park added. "A helicopter is on standby ... awaiting favorable flight conditions, although freezing rain is precluding flight operations today."

    The search party reported back that the snowpack was firmer than on Wednesday, making for an easier search, but the park service said the effort would be suspended if conditions become unsafe.

    "The weather is the greatest challenge to search efforts at this time," stated incident commander Kelly Bush.

    The two campers who were due out Sunday had planned to stay on the snowfield, while the climbers due out Monday had planned to summit the mountain.

    "Although both parties are equipped for winter camping, concern for their well being grows each day due to their dwindling food and supplies," the park stated.

    The campers are Mark Vucich, 37, of San Diego and Michelle Trojanowski, 30, of Atlanta.

    The climbers are a couple from Springfield, Ore., who have not been named.

    Rainier averages about two mountaineering deaths a year.

    Late Monday, a lost snowshoer was rescued after spending two nights on the mountain.

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    8 comments

    Any why do these rescuers have to put their lives at risk because some idiot decided to go climb a mountain in a snow storm? When will people be held responsible for their own actions?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, winter, mount-rainier
  • 18
    Jan
    2012
    5:47pm, EST

    100-mph gusts stop search for overdue Rainier climbers, hikers

    NPS.gov

    Mount Rainier saw white-out conditions on Wednesday.

    By msnbc.com staff

    A team of skilled skiers and climbers was being prepared to search for two campers and two climbers overdue from their trips up Mount Rainier during a major winter storm, the national park said Wednesday.

    The team, along with a helicopter crew, was having to wait for the storm hitting the Northwest to ease up. Two searchers had to turn back Tuesday due to 100-mph gusts.


    "A search team of two traveled the route above Paradise to Panorama Point Tuesday afternoon to assess conditions in the area and look for signs of two overdue parties," the park said in a statement. "Travel was extremely difficult with the team sinking two, three feet into the snow with each step. Visibility was limited, winds were gusting up to 100 mph, and their tracks filled in behind them as they negotiated the deep snow." 

    "Although both parties are equipped for winter camping there is concern with the delay in getting searchers into the field due to the risk associated with difficult travel conditions, severe weather, and extreme avalanche conditions." it added. "Avalanche conditions have gone from high to extreme overnight."

    The campers, who were due out on Sunday after a weekend at the Muir Snowfield, were identified as Mark Vucich of San Diego, Calif., and Michelle Trojanowski of Atlanta, Ga.

    The climbers, who were due back Monday from a summit attempt, were not identified.

    Late Monday, a lost snowshoer who spent two nights on Rainier was found by a search team.

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    24 comments

    I KNEW someone would manage to get themselves stuck out there with the worst blizzard in 25 years coming their way. I KNEW it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: winter, snow, mount-rainier
  • 4
    Jan
    2012
    3:46pm, EST

    Alleged Mount Rainier shooter's troubles may not have been service-related

    Pierce County Sheriff's Department via AP

    Benjamin Colton Barnes in an undated photo.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    The man who authorities say killed a ranger before dying in Mount Rainier National Park was in turmoil over developments in his personal life after his discharge from the Army, friends say, suggesting that his alleged actions over the weekend may have had little connection to his military service.

    The man, former Pfc. Benjamin Colton Barnes, 24 — who was found dead Monday, apparently of drowning in a creek after becoming hypothermic — shot and killed park Ranger Margaret Anderson, 34, on Sunday. He is also believed to have shot and wounded four people, two of them critically, earlier in the day at a New Year's party in Skyway, near Seattle, authorities said.

    Army records show that Barnes served in Iraq before returning stateside to Joint Base Lewis-McChord, south of Seattle. He was discharged from the Army in 2009 for drunken driving and illegal transportation of a private weapon.


    In July, the mother of Barnes' young daughter said in court papers seeking a protection order that he "has possible PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) issues." News organizations — including msnbc.com — noted the court filings and reported that Lewis-McChord is considered one of the most troubled bases in the U.S. military, with an alarming record of violent incidents and suicides among veterans returning from Iraq.

    But as more has been learned about Barnes, it appears that his troubles may have had little to do with his service in Iraq or his having been stationed at Lewis-McChord.

    Military records show that Barnes served in a headquarters communications job in Iraq. A spokesman at Lewis-McChord told The Seattle Times there was no record of Barnes' having received a Combat Action Badge, indicating he probably never came under fire in Iraq.

    There are also hints that Barnes was already disturbed before he entered the Army. Growing up in Riverside County, Calif., he was sent to a community day school for expelled and troubled students as a teenager, the Press-Enterprise newspaper reported.

    A reconstruction of Barnes' life since his discharge by The Seattle Times indicates that Barnes' erratic post-discharge behavior didn't seriously begin until this summer, when his relationship with his ex-girlfriend collapsed.

    Claiming Barnes was suicidal and had threatened her, the woman won a protective order that required Barnes to be supervised whenever he was with his daughter, according to court records reviewed by msnbc.com. A civil trial had been scheduled for Jan. 31. 

    The Times, meanwhile, quoting a friend, said Barnes recently traveled to the Riverside area for the funeral a close Army friend who committed suicide in October.

    Another friend told the newspaper that "everything just got to him. Life got so hard. He was so stressed. He would say, 'I feel like nobody's trying to help me. I feel like everybody's against me.'"

    Brandon Friedman, an Army combat veteran in Afghanistan and Iraq and author of the highly regarded memoir "The War I Always Wanted," told msnbc.com that it was wrong to link Barnes' alleged behavior to PTSD or conditions at Lewis-McChord, noting that the military "kicked Barnes out for misconduct."

    While some soldiers return from overseas duty with PTSD, most aren't diagnosed with it, and misconduct by other troubled soldiers at the base doesn't necessarily mean Barnes' misconduct was service-related, he said.

    Even if Barnes did have PTSD, as his ex-girlfriend says, "having PTSD doesn't signify a propensity to murder Americans," Friedman said, adding that he was concerned that depictions of Barnes as a sufferer of PTSD could fuel public perceptions that all Lewis-McChord veterans are "dangerous psychos."

    "The stereotype of the crazy vet is something vets have had to deal with for years, and it's simply not backed up with hard data," he said.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook

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    38 comments

    The sound you hear it the Department of Defence and the Army scrambling to wash their hands of any responsibility. Like so many others he, according to DOD, was not affected by his tour of duty. What he did was completely wrong but the military is responsible on its own part. If he was a sociopath b …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, crime, featured, gunman, mount-rainier, park-ranger, benjamin-colton-barnes, margaret-anderson
  • 3
    Jan
    2012
    3:18pm, EST

    Park visitor: Slain ranger 'saved my life'

    By msnbc.com staff

    TACOMA, Wash. -- A visitor who was the last civilian to speak with Margaret Anderson before she was killed believes the Mount Rainier National Park ranger saved his life by happenstance.

    Jeremy Best tells The News Tribune of Tacoma that he and some friends from church went to the park on New Year's Day to snowshoe. He said Anderson had shown the group where to park and they chatted briefly.

    AP

    Margaret Anderson

    Anderson was interrrupted by a call about a motorist who illegally drove past a snow-tire checkpoint. She drove out of the parking lot and back down the road.

    Moments later, at a roadblock, a gunman opened fire on her before she could get out of her car. The 34-year-old mother of two died at the scene.

    The man believed to be the killer, Benjamin Colton Barnes, a 24-year-old Iraq War veteran, was found dead on Monday in a snowy creek on the mountain. Authorities believe Barnes, who was also a suspect in an ealier New Year's shooting at a house party in Skyway, south of Seattle, that left four people injured, died because of the hypothermia.

    "I’m positive she saved my life," Best said of Anderson.

    "I was talking to her just minutes before it happened. If that car came up the road, if he had an automatic weapon, I wouldn’t be here. If it wasn’t for what she did – we were 10 minutes away from walking over to put on our snowshoes. He would have been up there and doing ...”

    You can read the full News Tribune story about Jeremy Best's account here.

    Other hikers and park visitors also mourned the loss of a park ranger.

    On NWHikers.net, a person with the username "kayakbear" described seeing planes and helicopters circling the mountain over their campsite in search of the gunman.

    "The chopper swoops back over us, and drops a coffee cup that reads: "A ranger has been shot shooter at large. Call on cell if able to Pierce Co sheriff" so we hurry even more to get out. An hour later cup #2 comes: "Take road to falls and sheriff deputies. We will keep an eye on you. Do not drive from paradise w/o armed escort."

    After we are all packed, the chopper comes back over us, gives us a signal to go ahead, and we start up the road. The chopper alternates between flying around the area and staying just ahead of us on the road. I've never had a helicopter escort before! At this point, we are all pretty worried, since we have nothing but snow shovels and we are having paranoid visions of a sniper bearing down on us. As we just turn the bend in the road, we run into the US Forest Tactical team sent out to get us. They are all armed with assault rifles, camo and enough gear to keep them out for a few long days. As we meet them they get a radio call that the shooter has been found, facedown in a stream dead. They escort us back to the end of the road just above narada falls where the ranger's truck is. Bullet holes and everything.

    Another person with the username markh752 wrote on a NWHikers.net forum:

    "As someone who got turned away at MRNP this morning, I would like thank the unknown ranger who recognized this person and/or his vehicle and tried to initiate the original stop. The park officials also did a great job of shutting down the park and locking down their facilities. There is a lot of law enforcement still up their in the cold and dark trying to apprehend this individual. And I am guessing that there is a 100 or so people at Paradise who are thankful for Margaret Anderson's bravery and heroism in not allowing this individual to reach the facilities at Paradise."

    "A very unfortunate incident to all that were involved.  Margaret was a good lady, wife, mother, and Ranger.  She will be missed," read another post by HundsSolo.

    Read msnbc.com's previous coverage of the search for the gunman here.

    The National Park Service has also set up a memorial page where people can leave reflections on Anderson. 

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    63 comments

    Its amazing so many people are entirely cluelsee about park rangers. The majority think the only job for a ranger is leading wildflower walks which is the job of an interpretive ranger. Wise up people, there are law enforcement rangers like Ms. Anderson who put their lives on line every day, and kil …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crime, mount-rainier, ranger
  • 1
    Jan
    2012
    3:05pm, EST

    Iraq vet sought in killing of Rainier ranger is found dead

    Police say Benjamin Colton Barnes left behind a trail of victims, starting with four shot at a house party south of Seattle on Sunday. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 5:20 p.m. ET: Officials confirm that a body found earlier Monday is that of Benjamin Colton Barnes, the suspect in the killing of Mount Rainier National Park Ranger Margaret Anderson. Two weapons were found with the body.

    No wounds were found on the body, suggesting he perished from the cold overnight. Barnes, an Iraq War veteran, was wearing just a T-shirt and jeans when his body was found in a river.

    Updated at 2:20 p.m. ET: A body was spotted by aircraft in a remote area and there's a strong probability it is Barnes, a sheriff's spokesman says.

    "One of the air units and some of the FBI SWAT team members and sheriff’s SWAT team members have found a body," said Pierce County Sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer. "We have not gotten to it, we are nowhere near it, it’s still buried in the snow."


    Updated at 2:05 p.m. ET: A body believed to be that of Barnes has been found, the Washington State Patrol tweets.

    Law enforcement authorities discuss the recovery of the body of the man suspected of killing Mount Rainier National Park Ranger Margaret Anderson.

    Updated at 1:40 p.m. ET: A Pierce County source says a body thought to be that of Barnes has been found in a ditch, KING5 TV reports.

    AP

    Park Ranger Margaret Anderson, 34, was fatally shot Sunday.

    Updated at 12:25 p.m. ET: Some 200 SWAT officers, police and rangers at Mount Rainier National Park in Washington state were searching Monday for an Iraq War veteran suspected in the killing on Sunday of a ranger. Highlights from a news conference that just wrapped up:

    • Rangers are trying to reach two people camping at a remote lake near the area that Benjamin Colton Barnes, 24, fled to so that they can be escorted out;
    • Barnes is in an area of deep snow and 6-10 miles from any inhabited area;
    • Margaret Anderson, the ranger killed on Sunday, could not be reached by park staff for 90 minutes because the gunman was shooting at them before he fled into the woods;
    • An aircraft with heat-sensing capabilities, as well as dogs and trackers in snowshoes are looking for Barnes;
    • It's possible that Barnes had sufficient all-weather gear to survive overnight in the park's cold temperatures.

    Updated at 11:35 a.m. ET: Barnes possibly suffers from post-traumatic stress following his deployments to Iraq, the mother of his child alleged in court documents. 

    NBC's Natalie Swaby reports on the tragedy and manhunt at Mount Rainier National Park.

    Barnes was involved in a custody dispute in Tacoma in July 2011, during which the toddler's mother sought a temporary restraining order against him, according to the documents. 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.

    Overnight, dozens of people were evacuated from the visitor's center and a small lodge.

    Mount Rainier National Park spokesman Kevin Bacher says Ranger Margaret Anderson was "shot as she was in the car."

    Evacuee Dinh Jackson, a mother from Olympia, Wash., who came to Mount Rainier to sled with family and friends Sunday, said officials ordered people to hurry into the lodge after the shooting that killed a park ranger.

    Officials had everyone get on their knees and place hands behind their heads as they went through the building, looking at faces to make sure the gunman was not among them, Jackson said.

    "That was scary for the kids," she said.

    Updated at 9:20 a.m. ET: About 125 people have been evacuated from the visitors center at Mount Rainier as authorities search for a gunman suspected of killing a park ranger.

    Pierce County Sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer says the visitors were transferred from the park overnight in groups of vehicles over the span of a few hours.

    He says teams looking for the suspect were assessing new tactical plans that they planned to put into place at daylight. About 150 officers converged on the park after ranger Margaret Anderson was shot to death Sunday morning.

    Troyer says Barnes was a "strong person of interest" in the slaying. He's believed to be well armed and have survivalist skills.

    Updated at 4:40 a.m. ET: Tourists stranded in Mount Rainier National Park amid the search for a gunman who shot dead a park ranger have begun to leave Paradise Lodge, NBC News reports. 

    Five cars at a time were leaving with an armed escort. The evacuations were due to continue through the night.


    Updated at 11:54 p.m. ET:
    A Mount Rainier National Park ranger was fatally shot following a New Year's Day traffic stop, and the 368-square-mile park in Washington state was closed as dozens of officers searched for the armed gunman over snowy and rugged terrain.

    AP

    Benjamin Coulton Barnes is seen in this undated photo provided by the Pierce County Sheriff's Dept.

    Pierce County Sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer said late Sunday afternoon that Benjamin Colton Barnes, a 24-year-old believed to have survivalist skills, was a "strong person of interest" in the slaying of Margaret Anderson.

    A parks spokesman said Barnes was an Iraq war veteran. Authorities recovered his vehicle, which had weapons and body armor inside, Troyer said.

    Barnes was also a suspect in the early Sunday morning shooting of four people at a house party south of Seattle, police said.

    Authorities believed the gunman was still in the woods, with weapons. They asked people to stay away from the park, and for those already inside to leave.

    "We do have a very hot and dangerous situation," Troyer said.

    Tracks in snow
    Troyer said authorities were following tracks in the snow they believe are from the gunman, and crews planned to bring an airplane through the area with heat-seeking capabilities.

    "We believe we have a good track on him, but he's way ahead of us," Troyer said.

    Kevin Bacher, a spokesman for the park, said about 125 people would spend Sunday night in the visitor center basement along with five law enforcement officers protecting the facility.

    He said crews had considered removing them in armored vehicles, but decided not to take any risk. There was enough food at the center, but Bacher said diapers were running in short supply.

    The park would remain closed Monday, officials announced late Sunday.

    Jason Simpson, 29, of Kent, said his parents were still trapped at the visitor's center after traveling to the mountain for a day hike. His parents were able to make a call explaining their situation, and Simpson drove to the park entrance to wait.

    "It's very distressing," Simpson said.

    Sgt. Cindi West, King County Sheriff's spokesperson, said late Sunday that Barnes was connected to an early-morning shooting at a New Year's house party in Skyway, Wash., south of Seattle that left four people injured, two critically. That incident happened about 3 a.m., and stemmed from an argument over a gun.

    West said three people fled the scene. Two were located, and West said authorities were trying to find Barnes and had been in contact with his family, trying to have them convince him to "come to the police and tell his side of the story" in the Skyway shooting.

    At Mount Rainier around 10:20 a.m. Sunday, the gunman sped past a checkpoint, park spokesman Kevin Bacher said. One ranger began following him while Anderson eventually blocked the road to stop the driver.

    Before fleeing, the gunman fired shots at both Anderson and the ranger that trailed him, but only Anderson was hit, Bacher said.

    Ed Troyer / AP

    In this pool photo provided by the Pierce Co. Sheriff's Dept., a police officer examines a car on a road at Mount Rainier National Park, Jan. 1. The car is believed to have been driven by Benjamin Colton Barnes, who officials say is a person of interest in the fatal shooting of a park ranger at the park Sunday morning.

    Park superintendent Randy King said Anderson was a mother of two young daughters. She had served as a park ranger for about four years.

    King said Anderson's husband also was working as a ranger elsewhere in the park at the time of the shooting.

    "It's just a huge tragedy — for the family, the park and the park service," he said.

    Adam Norton, a neighbor of Anderson's in the small town of Eatonville, Wash., said the ranger's family moved in about a year ago. He said they were not around much, but when they were Norton would see Anderson outside with her girls.

    "They just seemed like the perfect family," he said.

    The town of about 3,000 residents, which is a logging community near Rainier, is very close knit, he said.

    "It's really sad right now," Norton said. "We take care of each other."

    The shooting occurred on an unseasonably sunny and mild day. The park, which offers miles of wooded trails and spectacular vistas from which to see 14,410-foot Mount Rainier, draws between 1.5 million and 2 million visitors each year.

    The Longmire station served as headquarters when the national park was established in 1899. Park headquarters have moved but the site still contains a museum, a hotel, restaurant and gift shop, which are open year-round.

    Anderson was just the eighth national park ranger to be shot dead in the park system's history, the website Officer Down Memorial Page stated. A ninth was killed in a vehicle pursuit.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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