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Updated: Suspect In Mount Rainier National Park Shooting Found Dead

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National Park Rangers protect the public as well as the resource, and at times that requires the ultimate sacrifice. This moving memorial to Great Smoky Mountains National Park Ranger Joseph D. Kolodski sits beside Blue Ridge Parkway headquarters in Asheville, NC. Stationed in Great Smoky, he died in 1998 "protecting visitors from harm" while responding to an incident on the southern end of the Parkway. Randy Johnson photo.

Editor's note: This updates that the suspect confirmed dead in the park and provides additional details, including his name.

 

An Iraqi war veteran wanted in connection with the slaying of a ranger in Mount Rainier National Park was found dead Monday afternoon in a drainage near one of the park's hallmark waterfalls just south of Paradise.

How Benjamin Colton Barnes died, however, was not immediately known. While ground teams had reached the location of his body, they had not reported whether he had died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, from hyopthermia, or perhaps from a fall, park spokeswoman Lee Snook said.

Mr. Barnes had been the subject of a manhunt that grew to involve more than 200 law enforcement personnel from state, local and federal jurisdictions after Ranger Margaret Anderson was shot New Year's Day. At times he waded through chest-deep snow to evade the search teams, Ms. Snook said.

“The last time his tracks were found the snow was about chest deep, so it would have been cold, wet and difficult," she said. The tracks indicated that he was "post-holing" and had no snowshoes, the spokeswoman said.

Earlier Monday, park officials said aerial teams had spotted Mr. Barnes' prone body in a steep drainage near Narda Falls, a 176-foot cascade of the Paradise River that plunges over a basalt wall in two pitches, one falling about 159 feet, the other about 17.

Ranger Anderson, a 34-year-old law enforcement ranger, was shot and killed when she tried to intercept Mr. Barnes' car as it fled a routine checkpoint where park visitors were checked to see if they had chains for their tires. At a point on the road above Longmire and about a mile from Paradise the ranger used her cruiser to block the road so she could stop the man shortly after 10 a.m. Sunday.

"The assailant jumped from his car and opened fire with a shotgun, fatally wounding Ranger Anderson. The assailant then fled on foot into the woods," another park spokeswoman, Lee Taylor, said Sunday evening.

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Ranger Margaret Anderson. NPS photo.

When other rangers responded to the scene, they were prevented from reaching Ranger Anderson by the man, who kept them pinned down with gunfire from the woods, according to other park officials.

"It was about 90 minutes before they could reach her," Ms. Snook said Sunday afternoon.

The ranger, who became just the ninth ranger in Park Service history to be murdered in the line of duty, left behind a husband who also was a ranger in the park, and two young children, aged 2 and 4, according to park officials.

The more than 200 law enforcement personnel from the park, the FBI, and surrounding jurisdictions continued their manhunt into Sunday night, aided by a fixed-wing aircraft with forward-looking infrared to scan the ground, she said.

At Paradise, 125 park visitors who had come to Paradise to enjoy the day were moved for their safety into the Jackson Memorial Visitor Center along with 17 park staff.

"The visitor center has a restaurant to provide food, restrooms, and water, and law enforcement officers are on hand to provide protection," said Ms. Taylor.

Later Sunday evening they were escorted by authorities out of the park.

News reports out of Seattle said the man being sought was thought to have been involved in a shooting at a house there earlier Sunday, and that when authorities searched a car abandoned near Ranger Anderson they found it held survival gear and body armor.

In Washington, D.C., Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said Sunday that he was "deeply saddened by the tragic, horrific and cowardly murder today at Mount Rainier National Park."

"The Department of the Interior and the National Park Service will do everything possible to bring the perpetrator of this crime to justice and to ensure the safety of park visitors and other park rangers," the secretary said in a prepared statement. "This tragedy serves as a reminder of the risks undertaken by the men and women of the National Park Service and law enforcement officers across the Department every day, and we thank them for their service. My thoughts and prayers are with Margaret's family in this difficult time."

Park Service Director Jon Jarvis called the ranger's murder "a heartbreaking, senseless tragedy."

"Margaret was just 34 years old. She and her husband Eric, who is also a Park Ranger at Mount Rainier, have two young children," he added. "Margaret was killed while doing her job: protecting the visiting public on one of the park’s busiest days of the year."

Over the years more than 200 Park Service staff have died or been killed on the job. Kris Eggle, a ranger at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, was shot and killed in the line of duty in 2002 while pursuing suspected drug runners who were armed with AK-47s.

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Obviously if guns were still outlawed in national Parks this guy would have still brought all the guns he had in the car anyway.  Do you really think that saying you can't bvring guns into the parks would keep him from doing so?


My thoughts and prays go out to Ranger Andersons family and all the staff at Mt. Rainier National Park.  This really is a senseless and tragic loss for the NPS Family.


"Even more obscene is the fact that there are people out there who claim it's his "right."
So you think the constitution is "obscene"
And I ask again for Bruce (it didn't get posted the first time" - what is your remedy to get "less guns"?


Like these great wild places words can't express the feelings I have for this tragedy.  In the effort to derive sense and perhaps blame one might consider the scenario if the Perp had blown by Ranger Anderson as he had the check station earlier and reached the visitor center with more innocents present.  A much larger tragedy could have occured but maybe there would have been an individual raised in a two parent home, grounded in responsibility and respect that did carry a firearm instead of just the twisted and violent being armed.  I'm afraid the culture has declined in many cases losing, for many, the ability to deal with the tests of life for a variety of reasons that aren't always apparent or accepted.  Let us mourn Ranger Anderson, support her family and try and see clearly in this tragedy's aftermath.  There are an expanding number of individuals out there that are standing in the gap for Ranger Anderson's family including many outside the NPS community.  That's what families do.  


As disbelief turns into reality, it is quite possible that Ranger Margaret Anderson's action saved countless lives. My gratitude and thoughts go to Ranger Margaret Anderson, her family, all the men and women of the National Park Service Law Enforcement staff who make our National Parks safe for our use and enjoyment.


I am very saddened any time one of our Rangers, Police, Military, etc. are killed in the line of duty.  I do think that Ranger Anderson may have saved many lives with her action and it is sad that she had to pay for that with her life.
All this discussion about gun ownership is too late in her case.  This is not a matter of whether it is legal to carry a weapon into parks now (I don't like that, but it is now the law), but what 'kind' of weapons citizens are legally allowed to own.  In that picture, both of those weapons (shotgun with maybe 20 clip mag for high powered buck shot and maybe an AR-15) should never be allowed for private citizens.  We don't let people go buy grenades, M-16's, or other automatic weapons and other military grade weapons.  Why?  Because they are too dangerous as are the weapons he had.  So, why we can't have reasonable laws that prevent private ownership of these kinds of weapons is beyond me.  It may have prevented this if it was illegal to sell, buy, or possess these weapons.  One more thing, guns don't kill; people kill; is not a good argument.  Guns make it FAR EASIER for people to kill than using a knife, bat, sword, etc.


this is just so sad and tragic. my heart goes out to her family, friends, and all of the park staff. 


@ecbuck:  Ban them.  Abolish private gun ownership so that only the military, law enforcement, criminals, and crazies have them.  Dry up the supply so that the first two groups have the edge over the last two.  I'd put my faith in that situation much more readily than being able to whip out my own gun and defend myself from sudden, irrational, callous attack.  Robert said it well: "Guns make it FAR EASIER for people to kill than using a knife, bat, sword, etc."  Take the darned things out of the hands of criminals and crazies!  Where in the HECK did this guy acquire an Uzi and AK-47 (or their look-alikes), anyway?  Why is it so damned EASY to do so?  [Steady there, Bruce.  You're getting yourself worked up again.  Ready?  Begin:  OMMmmmmm... OMMmmmmm... OMMmmmmm...]


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