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 a 42-year-old man on
the FBI's Most Wanted List sought for the 2004
killing of an armored-truck guard in Phoenix to 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
their fugitive after authorities got the first
pictures of him from a motion-triggered surveillance
camera outside a cabin showing a sandy-haired man in
camouflage on snowshoes, a rifle slung over his
shoulder. The photos were captured sometime in
December.
"We believe that is not Jason
Derek Brown," FBI special agent Manuel Johnson told
The Associated Press. However, Edwards isn't so
quick to rule out the possibility, given the close
resemblance to Brown, who was raised Mormon and is a
highly educated, well-traveled avid outdoorsman.
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. The coffee and alcohol the
survivalist favors pla
ys
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."









