
Travis Decker manhunt shifts to Idaho forest after family potentially spots 'killer dad-of-three' at campground
Decker, 33, was accused of murdering his three daughters, Paityn, 9, Evelyn, 8, and Olivia, 5, and dumping their bodies in Leavenworth, Washington.
His daughters' remains were found on June 2, and despite a massive manhunt, authorities have yet to locate the alleged killer.
A potential break in the case came over the holiday weekend when a family camping in the Sawtooth National Forest reported a man who matched Decker's description, according to the US Marshals Service Greater Idaho Task Force.
The family was camping in the Bear Creek area, of the vast forest, which spans over two million acres across Idaho and Utah.
They said the unidentified man was between 5'8" and 5'10," with black gauged earrings and had a black backpack.
They added that he was wearing a black mesh cap, a cream-colored shirt, and black shorts. He had his hair in a ponytail and he had a mustache and an overgrown beard.
The description matches Decker's appearance, who is 5'8"and weighs around 190 lbs., according to the Chelan County Sheriff's Office. He also has black hair, brown eyes, and earrings.
The sheriff's office released doctored photos of Decker to illustrate what he could look like after being on the run for over a month.
Authorities have warned that he could be armed and dangerous. Anyone who believes they've spotted Decker has been warned not to approach him and call 911 immediately.
The US Marshals Office has offered a reward of up to $20,000 for any information leading to the suspect's arrest.
The potential update comes after an exhaustive weeks-long search that left authorities coming up with dead ends.
The nightmare saga began on May 30 when Decker picked his daughters up from their mother Whitney's home.
Whitney contacted police later that evening after Decker failed to bring the girls home. She expressed concern to authorities due to her ex-husband's history with mental health and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder from his time in the military.
Decker was court-mandated to receive mental health treatment and domestic violence anger management counseling but had refused. Police said he was homeless and living out of his car.
Authorities said Decker could look differently than his recent images, releasing doctored images of what he may look like now
The following day, police issued an Endangered Missing Person Alert for the three girls.
On June 2, Decker's vehicle was found, and authorities made the grim discovery of his daughters' remains.
Decker was charged with three counts of first-degree murder and kidnapping, but police never found the alleged killer.
Reports swirled two days later that Decker was spotted in Idaho, but authorities later dispelled the rumors.
An autopsy then confirmed the horrific cause of death was suffocation and their deaths were ruled a homicide.
Authorities later said that there was no evidence that Decker was still alive as the sheriff's office pivoted their search with cadaver dogs.
However, some experts, including law enforcement and security analyst Todd McGhee, said that Decker's extensive military background may've enabled him to live in the wilderness.
Decker joined the Army in 2013 and served in Afghanistan before transferring to the Washington National Guard in 2021, a communications director for the Washington Military Department previously confirmed to the Daily Mail.
The Guard was in the process of a disciplinary discharge due to Decker's absences when his daughters' were killed.
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Footage released by the Supreme Court of Victoria shows a medic attempting to stop Patterson as she tries to leave, pressing the buzzer to open the hospital door. Her "discharge at own risk" document was revealed, showing she chose to leave from the hospital on her "own responsibility against the advice of the medical officer/senior nursing staff". Moments after leaving, a hospital worker is captured on CCTV using gloves to inspect the leftover deadly beef wellington after police retrieved it from Patterson's bin - before taking a picture of it. A call to the police a hospital doctor made was also shown in court. Dr Chris Webster is heard saying on the phone: "I have a concern regarding a patient that presented here earlier but has left the building and is potentially exposed to a fatal toxin from mushroom poisoning. 'Mushroom killer' Erin Patterson GUILTY of murdering three relatives with deadly beef wellington "And I've tried several times to get hold of her on her mobile phone. "So there were five people that ate a meal on Saturday, and two of them are in intensive care at Dandenong Hospital. "Two have just been transferred from Leongatha Hospital to Dandenong Hospital. "And Erin presented this morning with symptoms of poisoning. "While I was attending the other patients, the nurse informed me that she had discharged herself against medical advice." Meanwhile in other CCTV footage released by the Supreme Court of Victoria shows Patterson trying to cover her tracks by dumping the food dehydrator she used in her twisted murder plot. Wearing a long coat and sunglasses, Patterson is seen unloading the food dehydrator at the Koonwarra Transfer Station on August 2, 2023 - an apparent attempt to erase evidence linked to the deadly beef wellington meal. And in a chilling image also released by the court, the meal that left her family dying in agony is laid out next to forensic evidence bags. 15 15 15 The annotated photo was taken during toxicology testing at the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine. It shows plates containing remnants of the now-infamous dish - prepared and served by Patterson in her Leongatha home. Patterson's three chilling words to her best friend after the guilty verdict stunned court observers. As she was led back to the cells, she reportedly told Alison Rose Prior: "See you soon." The pal, in tears, vowed she would visit Patterson in prison, despite the damning verdict. 'I'm her friend and I'll see her – I'll visit with her,' she told reporters outside the courthouse. In a bizarre prelude to the verdict, Patterson reportedly had black tarps installed around her Leongatha home just days before the jury returned with a decision. And in the aftermath of the verdict, chilling new medical insight has emerged. A leading US expert on amatoxin poisoning claims the victims never stood a chance — not because of the mushrooms alone, but due to Australia's outdated treatment protocols. The specialist, who asked not to be named, slammed the use of the drug silibinin. They told the Daily Mail it is 'virtually useless' without aggressive hydration and proper kidney function — both of which may have been compromised in the dying victims. According to the expert, Australian physicians, unfamiliar with such rare cases, were forced to rely on 'past wisdom' around the milk thistle-based drug. 15 15 15 15 15 But once patients' organs began shutting down from severe dehydration, the drug couldn't help. 'They went from sick to catastrophic in a short space of time,' he said. They added that the silibinin treatment could have backfired if IV fluids were reduced to manage brain swelling — a common emergency response that may have sealed their fate. The expert went on to say the victims' organs likely entered a rapid death spiral, especially once their kidneys stopped flushing out the deadly amatoxin. 'Lose the kidneys and all of the amatoxin in circulation gets taken up by the liver,' he warned. Only Ian Wilkinson, the lone survivor, lived long enough for a liver transplant — a rare intervention that ultimately saved him. Patterson claimed to have purchased dehydrated mushrooms at an Asian supermarket in Melbourne, Australia. But she couldn't remember exactly where she had bought them from. Despite Patterson pleading not guilty, she did accept that death cap mushrooms were in the meal she served. But she argued she didn't intend to harm anyone and that the mushrooms were just a tragic accident. All of Patterson's victims were related to her estranged husband Simon and died from liver failure within a week of the fatal lunch. 15 15 15