BigHornRam
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Hard to feel sorry for these people............
Winter catches couple off guard
By KIM BRIGGEMAN of the Missoulian
An Oklahoma woman froze to death and her common-law husband was rescued from a similar fate by Powell County law officers after winter caught the two unprepared in a shack high in the Garnet Mountains.
Mickey Charlene Davis, 67, had probably been dead for 12 to 14 days when authorities reached the site between Interstate 90 and Helmville just before midnight on Jan. 13, according to Powell County Sheriff Scott F. Howard.
Howard and a deputy found Jack L. McWhorter, 44, starving, hypothermic and “cabin-fevered up” upon reaching the remote site.
McWhorter sat on the floor, propped against his wife's body with an array of weapons spread in a half-circle in front of him.
“I don't know if he was worried about us. ... I don't know what was going through his head,” said Howard.
The officers transported the Oklahoma man by snowmobile more than 20 miles to waiting deputies, who rushed him to Powell County Memorial Hospital. McWhorter was released after several days, and is recuperating in a Deer Lodge apartment.
He intends to move back to Oklahoma when he's able, Howard said. McWhorter declined Wednesday to discuss his ordeal, which Howard guessed began around Thanksgiving.
“It's pretty emotional right now, and he just doesn't feel like talking about it,” the sheriff said.
Two small dogs and a cat were dead inside the shack when officers arrived. The only survivor besides McWhorter was a large dog that was protective of Davis. Howard estimated it was three-quarters wolf.
The absence of tracks indicated that no one - man, woman or beast - had been outside the hut for months. Howard said the couple had no snow machine with which to drive out, and had inadequate footwear to attempt to walk out after late November snowstorms stranded them.
McWhorter wore calf-high moccasins when he was rescued.
“They'd been in there for months, and they just flat ran out of food,” Howard said. “They didn't have good clothing; they didn't have any firewood cut, and no way to even start a fire.”
Seven bouillon cubes in McWhorter's pocket were the only food of any kind.
“That's all he had left,” said Howard, adding the man was “wringing wet” from urinating and defecating in his clothes.
“I don't believe he would have made it through that night,” the sheriff said. “If we would have waited and gone in the next morning, I think we would have found two deceased instead of just the one.”
Authorities gave Davis a county burial in Hillcrest Cemetery in Deer Lodge after attempts to locate her family were unsuccessful. Howard said he continues to look for anyone who has information on the woman's background. McWhorter, with whom Howard regularly checks in, doesn't know, “or if he does he's not telling us.”
Davis' driver's license lists her home town as Salina, Okla., a town of roughly 1,500 in the northeast corner of the state. Her date of birth was July 8, 1941.
The sheriff's office has feelers out in Oklahoma with law enforcement, funeral homes and shelters.
“We had hoped maybe in their post office box in Drummond there might be a Christmas card or something, but there wasn't anything,” said Howard. “We've just kind of run dry. There's got to be family somewhere that's going to be inquiring why she hasn't called or written.”
McWhorter and Davis apparently had their eye on the inexpensive 20-acre lot when they arrived from Oklahoma in a van sometime early last year. It's in what Howard called the “reforestation area,” a rugged and heavily logged section of the Garnets that has been divided into lots of 20 and 40 acres.
The couple had entered into an agreement with the landowner, he said, though he didn't know if they'd actually purchased the land.
“They planned to live there year-round,” said Howard. “They really weren't hiding from anything. Neither one of them had any criminal history or anything like that. They saw an ad and thought that would be wonderful place to be, with absolutely no knowledge what a mountain snowstorm can do and how quickly it can turn bad.”
There are a handful of year-round residents in the area, including a man and his wife who have lived there for some 40 years. Their home is about three miles from the site of the Davis-McWhorter shack, and it was those neighbors who realized they'd seen no signs of the newcomers by January.
When two snowmobilers stopped by to visit, the man asked them to buzz up and check on the McWhorter and Davis. As the men approached the hut they found the door propped open and a rifle sticking out.
Howard said the men had a brief exchange with McWhorter.
“He told them that he needed a sheriff, that he had a wolf and another dog in there, and that he had a dead woman in there,” the sheriff said. “It freaked them out, so they just said, ‘We're going to get the sheriff,' and off they went down the hill.”
Howard received the call at 6 p.m. at his home in Deer Lodge. After consulting with one of the men for directions, he and his deputy headed for the mountain. They left their snowmobiles running and cautiously approached the dark cabin.
Howard called out to McWhorter, who answered in a weak voice that he was physically unable to come outside. Howard edged in the door with no opposition, and turned his flashlight onto the ghastly scene.
After McWhorter was delivered to the hospital, the officers returned to the site to retrieve Davis' body and take stock of the scene.
“We opened cabin up, backed way, way off, and let that dog out,” Howard said. “He wanted out of the cabin as bad as we wanted him out.”
Still, the hybrid wolf remained protective of Davis. He hung around and was “pretty aggressive when we came out with her body and loaded her into the sled,” said Howard. “Then he took off down the trail and I never saw him again.”
The cabin, he added, was “just a mess, just horrible.”
“You could tell that there'd been a lot of confusion and disorientation in that place for some time. It appeared to me there was a lot of rifling through things, just trying to find food, thinking it should be there, but they must have already consumed it.”
Folks who successfully live in the mountains in winter know the risks involved and anticipate them, Howard said. They stock enough food and firewood for several years, break trail after each snowfall and continually upgrade their snowmobiles.
Davis and McWhorter “just weren't prepared,” he said. “They didn't realize what they were getting into. They didn't listen to what anyone up there was trying to tell them.”
Winter catches couple off guard
By KIM BRIGGEMAN of the Missoulian
An Oklahoma woman froze to death and her common-law husband was rescued from a similar fate by Powell County law officers after winter caught the two unprepared in a shack high in the Garnet Mountains.
Mickey Charlene Davis, 67, had probably been dead for 12 to 14 days when authorities reached the site between Interstate 90 and Helmville just before midnight on Jan. 13, according to Powell County Sheriff Scott F. Howard.
Howard and a deputy found Jack L. McWhorter, 44, starving, hypothermic and “cabin-fevered up” upon reaching the remote site.
McWhorter sat on the floor, propped against his wife's body with an array of weapons spread in a half-circle in front of him.
“I don't know if he was worried about us. ... I don't know what was going through his head,” said Howard.
The officers transported the Oklahoma man by snowmobile more than 20 miles to waiting deputies, who rushed him to Powell County Memorial Hospital. McWhorter was released after several days, and is recuperating in a Deer Lodge apartment.
He intends to move back to Oklahoma when he's able, Howard said. McWhorter declined Wednesday to discuss his ordeal, which Howard guessed began around Thanksgiving.
“It's pretty emotional right now, and he just doesn't feel like talking about it,” the sheriff said.
Two small dogs and a cat were dead inside the shack when officers arrived. The only survivor besides McWhorter was a large dog that was protective of Davis. Howard estimated it was three-quarters wolf.
The absence of tracks indicated that no one - man, woman or beast - had been outside the hut for months. Howard said the couple had no snow machine with which to drive out, and had inadequate footwear to attempt to walk out after late November snowstorms stranded them.
McWhorter wore calf-high moccasins when he was rescued.
“They'd been in there for months, and they just flat ran out of food,” Howard said. “They didn't have good clothing; they didn't have any firewood cut, and no way to even start a fire.”
Seven bouillon cubes in McWhorter's pocket were the only food of any kind.
“That's all he had left,” said Howard, adding the man was “wringing wet” from urinating and defecating in his clothes.
“I don't believe he would have made it through that night,” the sheriff said. “If we would have waited and gone in the next morning, I think we would have found two deceased instead of just the one.”
Authorities gave Davis a county burial in Hillcrest Cemetery in Deer Lodge after attempts to locate her family were unsuccessful. Howard said he continues to look for anyone who has information on the woman's background. McWhorter, with whom Howard regularly checks in, doesn't know, “or if he does he's not telling us.”
Davis' driver's license lists her home town as Salina, Okla., a town of roughly 1,500 in the northeast corner of the state. Her date of birth was July 8, 1941.
The sheriff's office has feelers out in Oklahoma with law enforcement, funeral homes and shelters.
“We had hoped maybe in their post office box in Drummond there might be a Christmas card or something, but there wasn't anything,” said Howard. “We've just kind of run dry. There's got to be family somewhere that's going to be inquiring why she hasn't called or written.”
McWhorter and Davis apparently had their eye on the inexpensive 20-acre lot when they arrived from Oklahoma in a van sometime early last year. It's in what Howard called the “reforestation area,” a rugged and heavily logged section of the Garnets that has been divided into lots of 20 and 40 acres.
The couple had entered into an agreement with the landowner, he said, though he didn't know if they'd actually purchased the land.
“They planned to live there year-round,” said Howard. “They really weren't hiding from anything. Neither one of them had any criminal history or anything like that. They saw an ad and thought that would be wonderful place to be, with absolutely no knowledge what a mountain snowstorm can do and how quickly it can turn bad.”
There are a handful of year-round residents in the area, including a man and his wife who have lived there for some 40 years. Their home is about three miles from the site of the Davis-McWhorter shack, and it was those neighbors who realized they'd seen no signs of the newcomers by January.
When two snowmobilers stopped by to visit, the man asked them to buzz up and check on the McWhorter and Davis. As the men approached the hut they found the door propped open and a rifle sticking out.
Howard said the men had a brief exchange with McWhorter.
“He told them that he needed a sheriff, that he had a wolf and another dog in there, and that he had a dead woman in there,” the sheriff said. “It freaked them out, so they just said, ‘We're going to get the sheriff,' and off they went down the hill.”
Howard received the call at 6 p.m. at his home in Deer Lodge. After consulting with one of the men for directions, he and his deputy headed for the mountain. They left their snowmobiles running and cautiously approached the dark cabin.
Howard called out to McWhorter, who answered in a weak voice that he was physically unable to come outside. Howard edged in the door with no opposition, and turned his flashlight onto the ghastly scene.
After McWhorter was delivered to the hospital, the officers returned to the site to retrieve Davis' body and take stock of the scene.
“We opened cabin up, backed way, way off, and let that dog out,” Howard said. “He wanted out of the cabin as bad as we wanted him out.”
Still, the hybrid wolf remained protective of Davis. He hung around and was “pretty aggressive when we came out with her body and loaded her into the sled,” said Howard. “Then he took off down the trail and I never saw him again.”
The cabin, he added, was “just a mess, just horrible.”
“You could tell that there'd been a lot of confusion and disorientation in that place for some time. It appeared to me there was a lot of rifling through things, just trying to find food, thinking it should be there, but they must have already consumed it.”
Folks who successfully live in the mountains in winter know the risks involved and anticipate them, Howard said. They stock enough food and firewood for several years, break trail after each snowfall and continually upgrade their snowmobiles.
Davis and McWhorter “just weren't prepared,” he said. “They didn't realize what they were getting into. They didn't listen to what anyone up there was trying to tell them.”