
Help us find ‘killer father,' police urge ‘American Alps' tourists
Detectives have been searching for Travis Decker after his children Olivia, five, Evelyn, eight, and Paityn, nine, were found dead on June 2.
He has been accused of suffocating his daughters with plastic bags after picking them up from their mother for what should have been a three-hour joint custody visit on May 30.
The children were found at an abandoned campsite in the Cascades, a picturesque mountain range in Washington state which attracts tens of thousands of visitors annually.
The search for Mr Decker, an army veteran who has wilderness survival skills, has been complicated by difficult terrain.
A search of the area using drones, a white water team and GoPro cameras has so far been unsuccessful.
However, officials hope tourists descending on the area could help them catch the suspect.
'It may work in our favour, now that we have that many people out there just saturating that part of the county with camping, hiking and other recreating,' Chelan County sheriff Mike Morrison told CNN.
He added: 'This is typically how cases like this are brought to an end – is that we have someone that remained observant, saw something, reported it.'
'Eventually, luck runs out'
Officers found Mr Decker's truck around 100 yards from where his daughters' bodies were discovered at the Rock Island Campground, suggesting he fled on foot. Cable ties and plastic bags were also found in the area, police said.
A bloody fingerprint was discovered on the truck's tailgate, while blood at the scene matched a DNA profile believed to be Mr Decker's.
Police are now expanding their search to Icicle Creek, which runs through the Cascades, after its waters began to recede.
'We're not going to glorify his abilities. We don't think that he's some kind of special forces guru,' Mr Morrison said. He added: 'He could get lucky at times, and eventually, luck runs out.'
On June 10, authorities in Washington said there had been a suspected sighting of Mr Decker near a remote lake in a popular backpacking area in the Cascade Range.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Inside the personal life of Erin Patterson as her eye-watering wealth is revealed after the mother-of-two was found guilty of mushroom poisoning
Court testimony has revealed details about Erin Patterson 's personal life before she was found guilty of murdering her three in-laws with death cap mushrooms in a beef Wellington that she served at her home for lunch. Patterson's father-in-law and mother-in-law Don and Gail Patterson and Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson died after the lunch at her Leongatha home, in south-east Victoria, on July 29, 2023. Following a 10-week trial and seven days of deliberation, Patterson was found guilty of three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder, as Heather's husband, Pastor Ian Wilkinson, survived the deadly meal. Details of Patterson's personal life were aired in court during the trial, including the extent of her wealth, which included $2million from her paternal grandmother's estate. Patterson was raised in a brick home on a quiet street in Glen Waverley - a middle-class suburb in Melbourne 's south-east. Her mother, Heather Scutter, was a respected lecturer at Monash University and an expert in children's literature, and her father, Eitan Scutter, held director roles in multiple Australian companies. Those who knew Patterson from her younger days described her as being a smart and witty woman. However, in her childhood, Patterson told the court she developed an eating disorder and low self-esteem - a battle which remained with her into her adult life. In her mid-20s, Patterson left her science course and pursued a degree in accounting. In 2001, she also sat for an Air Services class photo - which included all the trainee air traffic controllers for that year. She became one of the few people to make it through the training program after successfully passing the notoriously difficult air traffic controller test. Former colleagues described Erin as a solitary, odd and strange young woman who was a bit of a loner and could be abrupt, abrasive and rude. She was also the only person in the 14-person air traffic controller training group who declined every invitation to social activities and events. Accounts from former air traffic controller colleagues painted a picture of Patterson as a crafty employee who would call in sick pretending to be other workers so that she could pick up lucrative shifts. Patterson was not an air traffic controller for long before she transitioned to working in animal management for the RSPCA at Monash City Council. It was here, in 2004, where she met her ex-husband Simon Patterson who was working at the council as a civil engineer. In his testimony to the court, Mr Patterson described his former wife as 'very intelligent', 'witty' and 'quiet funny'. He added the pair got to know each other as part of a 'fairly electric' group of friends before they developed a romantic relationship. 'I guess some of the things that attracted me to her in the first place was definitely her intelligence,' Mr Patterson testified. 'She is quite witty and can be quite funny.' Patterson was involved in a drunken crash, where she was almost three times over the legal limit, the same year she met her now-estranged husband. Court records revealed she had been driving an unregistered car and fled the scene of the crash. She was also caught driving 35km/h over the 60km/h speed limit. Patterson pleaded guilty to five charges. She was fined $1,000 and had her licence cancelled and was disqualified from driving in Victoria for two and a half years. In her testimony, she told the court she was a 'fundamental atheist' and initially tried to convert Mr Patterson, who was a devout Christian. 'Things happened in reverse and I became a Christian,' Patterson told the jury. She explained she experienced a 'spiritual experience' while on a camping trip when the pair attended a service at Korumburra Baptist church where Simon's uncle, Ian Wilkinson, was a pastor. 'I'd been approaching religion as an intellectual exercise up until that point,' Patterson said. 'But I had what I would call a religious experience there and it quite overwhelmed me.' In June 2007, the Pattersons were married. The wedding was held at Don and Gail's Korumburra home and Simon's cousin, David Wilkinson, walked Patterson down the aisle. Patterson told the court her parents did not attend the wedding as they were on holiday travelling across Russia on a train. In July 2006, her paternal grandmother Ora Scutter died, leaving her significant estate to her two sons and seven grandchildren. Mr Patterson told the court his ex-wife's share of the estate ended up being about $2million, which was paid out across eight years from 2007. Soon afterwards, the pair quit their council jobs and set off on a cross-country trip, travelling around Australia. When they reached Western Australia, the pair settled down and bought a house without a mortgage. In January 2009, they welcomed their first child, after what Patterson called the 'very traumatic' birth of her son. Her experience led to a mistrust of doctors, with Patterson telling the jury she would often question whether they knew what they were doing. On the stand, Patterson said Don and Gail stayed with them after the birth of her son and described Gail as being 'really supportive, and gentle and patient'. 'I remember being really relieved that Gail was there because I felt really out of my depth,' Patterson said. The pair did not stay in the rural community for long and just a few months later packed up their home and moved to Townsville. After months of travelling, Patterson said she had had enough and wanted to fly back to Perth while Mr Patterson and their son drove back to Western Australia. This led to the couple's first separation in late 2009, with Patterson and her son living in a rental while Mr Patterson lived in a caravan nearby for six months. The couple underwent marriage counselling before reuniting when Mr Patterson moved to the wheatbelt town of York where he worked for council as a civil engineer. For a time, the couple also lived in Quinninup, in Western Australia's southwest, where Patterson opened a second-hand bookstore in the small rural town of Pemberton. Mr Patterson told the court there were other brief periods of separation while they lived in Western Australia before they moved back to Victoria in 2013. In 2014, the pair welcomed their second child, a girl, and also bought a family home in Korumburra to be close to Mr Patterson's family. The couple separated for a final time in late 2015. When asked about the separation, Patterson told the jury she believed the key issue was communication. 'Primarily what we struggled with over the entire course of our relationship … we just couldn't communicate well when we disagreed about something,' Patterson said. 'We could never communicate in a way that made each of us feel heard or understood, so we would just feel hurt and not know how to resolve it.' The pair remained close and co-operative, with Patterson explaining she kept close to her father and mother-in-law and would attend family events. 'It never changed. I was just their daughter-in-law and they just continued to love me,' Patterson said. The court heard Patterson inherited a large amount of money after her mother passed away from cancer in 2019. Eight years earlier, Patterson's father had also died from cancer, which meant her grandmother's entire estate was left to her and her sister. Her parent's beachfront retirement home in Eden sold for $900,000, with part of the money used to buy a block of land at Gibson Street in Leongatha. Patterson built a family home on the block of land, the home which became the location of the deadly lunch. She registered the home, and also a property in Glen Waverley, as shared ownership with Mr Patterson. Mr Patterson told the jury he believed Patterson put his name on the titles because she was committed to their family and that she remained hopeful for a reconciliation. The court heard from three witnesses who became acquainted with Patterson in 2020 through an online true crime Facebook group. Patterson began socially chatting with others during the Covid pandemic and well into 2023. Non-profit manager Christine Hunt told the court Patterson was known as the group's 'super-sleuth', claiming she uncovered details of true crime cases they discussed. Daniela Barkley, a stay-at-home mum, described Patterson to the jury as a 'wonderful' mother but recalled she would often air issues about her husband and his family. In a series of messages sent to the group in 2022 between December 6 and 9, Patterson complained about her 'deadbeat' partner and his 'lost cause' family. 'I'm sick of this s*** I want nothing to do with them. I thought his parents would want him to do the right thing but it seems their concern about not wanting to feel uncomfortable and not wanting to get involved in their son's personal matters are overriding that so f*** em,' one message read. Mr Patterson claimed that while they remained friendly during separation, things changed in 2022 when his relationship status on his tax return was changed to single. He told the court the status change was the result of a mix-up with his accountant. 'She discovered that my tax return for the previous year for the first time noted we were separated,' Mr Patterson said. The Trial of Erin Patterson is available now, wherever you get your podcasts. Listen here Patterson told him the move would impact the family tax benefit the couple had previously enjoyed and she was obliged to now claim child support. 'She was upset about it,' he said. Patterson also wanted child support and the school fees paid. However, Mr Patterson said he was advised by authorities to stop paying for school fees and medical bills he had been previously covering. The move upset his increasingly estranged wife and the court heard Patterson had even changed the children's school without consulting their father. In the end, the jury had to weigh up all the evidence and sift through the testimony of those who took the stand. The mother-of-two sat defiantly throughout her 10-week trial, glaring at the media, members of the public and the family of the people she murdered. The unassuming Victorian woman drew international attention after three of her husband's family died following a lunch at her Leongatha home, in south-east Victoria, on July 29, 2023. Patterson pleaded not guilty to the murders of Don and Gail Patterson - her husband's parents - and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson. Only Heather's husband, Pastor Ian Wilkinson, survived her plot - a blunder Patterson would live to regret, and will now serve time for after also being found guilty of attempting to murder him. Prosecutors argued Patterson had intentionally sourced the poisonous mushrooms with the intent to kill or seriously injure her four guests. Following seven days of deliberation, the jury returned to Latrobe Valley court on Monday and delivered a unanimous guilty verdict on all four charges. The estranged wife, devoted mother-of-two, multi-millionaire and generous in-law was deemed a callous killer. With three murder convictions and one attempted murder conviction, Patterson will be sentenced at a later date.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Police launch probe after pensioner 'hurled abuse at nursery worker and smacked phone out of her hand' in vicious row over PARKING
Police have launched an investigation after a video of a pensioner hurling abuse at a female nursery worker and hitting her phone several times in a ferocious row over parking has gone viral. Hertfordshire Constabulary has said they received reports of an elderly man holding a screwdriver, and hitting the victim's phone as she held it, but the tool can't be seen in the clip. The woman, who says she is 21, filmed the enraged pensioner as he lashed out at her for parking outside the Silver Birch Court residential home as he pointed to the 'two notices' before adding: 'You've driven past both of 'em!' Explaining how she had been working at the nearby nursery in Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, the woman said there were 'loads of places' to park in the space - sparking the row to descend into vitriol. 'I don't give a f***! You're illegally parked, there are two notices there that tell you not to park, it's private property and you've been here all day,' he shouted. When the nursery worker retorted claiming she had been in the space for around four hours, bringing out her timesheet, the pensioner taunted her shouting 'yap, yap, yap, yap, yap' as he gestures with his hand. 'I would have apologised if you would have asked nicely,' the woman exclaimed, while the elderly man yelled while hitting her phone three times, 'You keep f****** shouting at me you slapper, go on!' The woman goes on: 'If you had come to me and said, "Listen darling you can't park there." I would've apologised to you. You came at me guns blazing, I'm a 21-year-old girl now get out my face and f*** off.' After she pleads with the man to get away from her, saying she was 'scared', the pensioner sarcastically responded, while placing his hands in a prayer-like motion: 'Oh dear, please forgive me.' As the nursery worker attempted to drive away from the confrontation, the man blocks her from shutting the door. She said: 'Get out my car, can you move. I'm trying to shut my f****** door mate, can you move? Move so I can shut my door, you are scaring me. Please can you move! 'You've made your point now f***off home!' After he protested how he wasn't in her car, he added: 'Why don't you apologise for your language.' 'Absolutely f*****g not,' she said, while he retorted: 'Then you're f***** stay here all day! And I'll get the fellas when they come in and they will block you in.' Following the distributing encounter last week, residents have since controversially defended the man's behaviour urging others to not park in the area. Speaking on Monday at the Silver Birch Court retirement complex on Friends Avenue, one woman told MailOnline: 'She was laughing and goading him. She's not a kid. 'If you go to work in a car you need to be responsible where you park it. 'People are paying £350 a month service charges and people think they can just park here?' 'He didn't need to be aggressive. The language was not very nice,' one resident added. 'There aren't enough places for the people that live here. All the carers have to park.' A local said they were appalled by what they saw, simply branding the pensioner 'vile', while one quipped: 'If that was one of my girls he would need an ambulance.' 'I bet he would act differently if a man was there,' a fourth shared, as another chimed in: 'I understand it both sides, she shouldn't have parked there but he shouldn't have been so rude, as she said if he had been more polite it would have been different.' Hertfordshire Constabulary told MailOnline: 'Police are investigating an incident which happened in Friends Avenue, Cheshunt, at around midday on Tuesday 2 July. 'It was reported that a man shouted aggressively at a woman in a dispute over parking. 'It was reported that he was holding a screwdriver and that he hit the victim's phone that she was holding. 'The incident is being treated as a common assault and enquiries are underway.' Any witnesses or persons with information in relation to the incident have been urged to contact 101 quoting crime reference 41/62415/25. Individuals can also report information to an operator in our Force Communications Room via their online web chat at Alternatively, those who wish to remain anonymous can do so by contacting the independent charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.


The Independent
3 hours ago
- The Independent
Trump's border czar defends increasing number of arrests of non-violent migrants: ‘We're gonna enforce law'
President Donald Trump 's 'border czar' has defended the increasing number of arrests of non-violent migrants, saying 'that's our job.' On Monday, Tom Homan said that although public safety threats were a priority, those who were in the country illegally were 'not off the table.' 'We're gonna enforce immigration law,' he said. Homan's remarks follow public backlash to the Trump administration's mass deportation agenda. White House senior advisor Stephen Miller told Fox News last month that Immigration and Customs Enforcement set a goal of a 'minimum' of 3,000 arrests a day. Miller also reportedly told ICE officials to target community hubs, Home Depot parking lots and 7-Eleven convenience stores to find suspects, according to The Wall Street Journal. Homan offered a similar hardline stance on Monday. 'National security threats, public safety threats are always the priority,' he told reporters. 'But if you're in the country illegally you're not off the table. ' 'I mean I see people saying we're arresting non-criminals. Well, they're in the country illegally, that's our job,' he said. 'We told ICE agents in the process of going out looking for the bad guy — and this is the problem with sanctuary cities. When we go to a community to go find the criminal, many times they're with others. Others that may not be a criminal target, but they're in the United States illegally they're coming too. We're gonna enforce immigration law.' Homan went on to claim that former Secretary of Homeland Security, Alejandro Mayorkas, had instructed ICE agents not to arrest 'illegal aliens for simply being here illegally… 'They've got to be arrested [or] be convicted of a serious criminal offense.' He re-wrote the law. That's not what the law says.' 'We're gonna enforce the law,' Homan added. 'That's why the people put President Trump in office to do and that's what we're doing.' Despite the president's pledge to aggressively pursue 'the worst of the worst,' among immigrants in detention now, 47 percent have no criminal record whatsoever, and fewer than 30 percent have been convicted of crimes, according to analysis from The Independent. The number of people without a criminal record being arrested by ICE agents and held in detention has jumped 800 percent since January, according to reports.