
Travis Decker's doppelganger reveals the heart-stopping moment he realized US Marshals were hunting him
A family camping at Sawtooth National Forest told police on July 5 they believed they saw Decker, who vanished after allegedly suffocating his three little girls and dumping their bodies near Washington's Rock Island Campground.
The US Marshals Service soon after declared the search for the Army veteran fugitive, 32, had expanded to the Idaho wilderness.
News of the shocking development in the hunt for Decker, who went missing more than a month ago, spread rapidly throughout fearful local communities.
The announcement hit particularly close to home for a man named Nick, who was in the Bear Creek area of the park at the same time 'Decker' was spotted there.
The Garden City resident told Idaho News 6 the friend he went camping with sent him an alarming text on Monday after they had both made it home.
'Bro, there's a manhunt for a killer that was in the campground with us. My God, we spent the night next the murder that is frightening,' the message read.
And then it hit him.
'On Tuesday the dots started connecting as news developed with better detail and I realized someone reported me as Decker,' Nick elaborated in a Reddit thread.
Nick's friend, who came with him on Friday, had to leave early Saturday morning. But he decided to stay and enjoy the scenic park on his time off from work.
He recalled a brief interaction he had with four people while traveling alone on a Bear Creek trail on Saturday around 10am.
'About an hour later I returned to the main 889 trail and at the intersection, there was a group of four old timers in two Razors, right in the path, just sitting there as I approached down a switchback,' he explained on Reddit.
'They started to use the intersection to 3 point turn and leave. I stayed about 25 yards back and waited for the second Razor to fumble the steering, drive over bushes, apologize for her "sh*tty driving" (her words) and finally make room for me to continue.'
Nick has tattoos, a thick beard, long hair and earrings. While he was hiking on that Saturday, he was sporting a black backpack, a tan shirt and black shorts.
This was the description the family gave to police - and it also happens to match what investigators say Decker may look like.
'In my opinion, I don't realistically look like that guy,' he told Idaho News 6. Nick was wearing sunglasses at the time and 'they saw me from a distance,' he added.
When Nick came to the nerve-wracking realization that he had been confused with the suspected triple-murderer, he immediately tried to sound the alarm to authorities.
He first tried the Fairfield Ranger Station, which is located in the national park, on Tuesday. But he said his call went straight to voicemail.
Nick tried dialed the station again the following day and to his relief, someone picked up the phone this time around.
He explained why he believed there may have been a mix up between him and Decker.
Meanwhile, helicopters and search crews were swarming the Bear Creek area hoping to capture the wanted man.
About three hours after he made the call, three plain-clothed US Marshals came to Nick's office, bringing security camera pictures of him to confirm his story.
Soon after meeting with Nick, the agency suspended the Idaho manhunt.
Eric Toms, supervisory deputy with the US Marshals, confirmed with USA TODAY on Thursday the Idaho hunt sparked by the July 5 tip was called off and that they spoke with Nick.
But the over search for Decker is far from over, Toms assured.
While investigators have been relentlessly searching for the veteran - vowing to get justice for his daughters he allegedly killed - they have considered the possibility that he may be dead, introducing cadaver dogs to their widespread manhunt.
Decker has been missing since May 30, when he failed to return the three little girls, Paityn, 9, Evelyn, 8, and Olivia, 5, back to their mother Whitney after a visit.
Whitney, who is divorced from the veteran, told police that he had picked the girls up around 5pm but had not returned them by 8pm, and his phone went straight to voicemail, court documents said.
Detectives said she 'expressed concern because Decker reportedly has never done this before and … is currently experiencing some mental health issues.'
She also told law enforcement officials that Decker was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder and believes he did not take medication for the condition, according to court documents.
He was court-mandated to seek out mental health and domestic violence anger management counseling, but refused treatment.
At the time of his disappearance and his daughters' deaths, Decker was living out of a white 2017 GMC Sierra pickup truck, police said.
'He clearly had some sort of break and everything that he had been living with, everything that had been bottled up inside of him for so long as far as trauma, just won out,' Whitney's lawyer, Arianna Cozart, previously told the Seattle Times.
On June 2, a search party led to the chilling discovery of the sisters' dead bodies near Rock Island Campground in Chelan County along with Decker's truck.
Deputies found the girls' bodies about 75 to 100 yards from Decker's truck.
An autopsy revealed the girls died from suffocation and police reported their wrists were zip-tied and plastic bags were over their heads when they were found, court documents said.
Police collected 'a large amount of evidence' from the truck, including male blood and non-human blood.
The alleged-killer's dog was found nearby as well and taken to an animal humane society, Fox 8 reported.
Chilling audio from just months before the harrowing murders captured the fugitive father begging for more custody time to go camping with his daughters.
In the recording from a September 2024 custody hearing, Decker makes an eerie promise that no harm would come to the girls if he's given more time to take them camping in Washington's wilderness.
With an extensive combat background, authorities and locals have been concerned about Decker being on the loose.
He joined the Army in 2013 and served in Afghanistan before transferring to the Washington National Guard in 2021, Karina Shagren, communications director for the Washington Military Department, confirmed to the Daily Mail.
He was a full-time member of the Guard until 2023 or 2024, when he switched to part-time.
Decker stopped attending mandatory monthly drills a little over a year ago, and the Guard was in the process of a disciplinary discharge.
He likely has advanced combat training and was an airborne paratrooper who earned the elite rank of 'Ranger,' indicating he would have excellent wilderness and survival skills, Fox 13 Seattle reported, citing social media posts.
Decker is charged with three counts of first-degree murder and first-degree kidnapping.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
14 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Zuckerberg and Meta officers settle claim they lost company billions by violating privacy laws
Mark Zuckerberg and current and former directors and officers of Meta Platforms agreed on Thursday to settle claims seeking $8bn for the damage they allegedly caused the company by allowing repeated violations of Facebook users' privacy, a lawyer for the shareholders told a Delaware judge on Thursday. The parties did not disclose details of the settlement and defense lawyers did not address the judge, Kathaleen McCormick of the Delaware court of chancery. McCormick adjourned the trial just as it was to enter its second day and she congratulated the parties. The plaintiffs' lawyer, Sam Closic, said the agreement just came together quickly. Billionaire venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, who is a defendant in the trial and a Meta director, was scheduled to testify on Thursday. Shareholders of Meta sued Zuckerberg, Andreessen and other former company officials including Sheryl Sandberg, the former chief operating officer, in hopes of holding them liable for billions of dollars in fines and legal costs the company paid in recent years. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) fined Facebook $5bn in 2019 after finding that it failed to comply with a 2012 agreement with the regulator to protect users' data. The shareholders wanted the 11 defendants to use their personal wealth to reimburse the company. The defendants denied the allegations, which they called 'extreme claims'. Facebook changed its name to Meta in 2021. The company was not a defendant. The company declined to comment. A lawyer for the defendants did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 'This settlement may bring relief to the parties involved, but it's a missed opportunity for public accountability,' said Jason Kint, the head of Digital Content Next, a trade group for content providers. Zuckerberg was expected to take the stand on Monday and Sandberg on Wednesday. The trial was scheduled to run through the end of next week. The case was also expected to include testimony from former Facebook board members Peter Thiel, Palantir Technologies co-founder, and Reed Hastings, co-founder of Netflix . Meta investors alleged in the lawsuit that former and current board members completely failed to oversee the company's compliance with the 2012 FTC agreement and claim that Zuckerberg and Sandberg knowingly ran Facebook as an illegal data harvesting operation. The case followed revelations that data from millions of Facebook users was accessed by Cambridge Analytica, a now-defunct political consulting firm that worked for Donald Trump's successful US presidential campaign in 2016. Those revelations led to the FTC fine, which was a record at the time. On Wednesday, an expert witness for the plaintiffs testified about what he called 'gaps and weaknesses' in Facebook's privacy policies but would not say if the company violated the 2012 agreement that Facebook reached with the FTC. Sign up to TechScape A weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our lives after newsletter promotion Jeffrey Zients, a former board member, testified on Wednesday that the company did not agree to the FTC fine to spare Zuckerberg legal liability, as shareholders allege. On its website, the company has said it has invested billions of dollars into protecting user privacy since 2019. The trial would have been a rare opportunity for Meta investors to see Zuckerberg answer probing questions under oath. In 2017, Zuckerberg was expected to testify at a trial involving a lawsuit by company investors opposed to his plan to issue a special class of Facebook stock that would have extended his control over that company. That case also settled before he took the stand. 'Facebook has successfully remade the 'Cambridge Analytica' scandal about a few bad actors rather than an unraveling of its entire business model of surveillance capitalism and the reciprocal, unbridled sharing of personal data,' Kint said. 'That reckoning is now left unresolved.'


BBC News
14 minutes ago
- BBC News
Mother and son rescued in California forest, left handwritten notes
A mother and her nine-year-old son lost in the rocky mountain forest of Sierra Nevada in the US state of California were rescued thanks to a trail of handwritten notes they left behind - after getting stranded for more than 24 hours.A search and rescue team found the pair on 12 July after discovering multiple notes tucked beneath rocks, left by the mother, aged 49. "HELP. Me and my son are stranded with no service and can't call 911," one said. The pair were found by members of the Calaveras County Volunteer Search and Rescue Team, who already happened to be in the area. The mother told ABC10 it had been a "very scary experience", but paid tribute to the "amazing" efforts of the rescuers. The mission was detailed in a Facebook post by the Calaveras County Sheriff's Office. On 11 July, someone phoned the Calaveras County Dispatch Center and informed officers that the duo were "overdue" to return after departing for Camp Wolfeboro around 11:30 PST (18:30 GMT), the post mother and son were also not responding to phone calls, police were to ABC10, the mother, who identified herself as Tami, confirmed that they were unable to make any calls of their own, and that her son Stirling resorted to blowing his Cub Scout whistle in an effort to gain attention. She had been attempting to drop off Stirling for a camping trip, she police Facebook post said a volunteer search and rescue team already in the area for monthly training was soon deployed. It established a command post along the highway that leads to Wolfeboro."The team began assessing the terrain and the complex network of interconnecting, labyrinth-like roads to establish effective search parameters," the post added. "Air assets" and "specially equipped" off-road vehicles were also used in the search. A group of campers sent a text message to an emergency line telling police that they had seen a vehicle matching the description of the missing persons, which authorities said "confirmed that the teams were searching in the correct area".Shortly afterwards, a rescue crew located the first handwritten message."We are ahead, up the road to the right. Please call 911 to get help for us. Thank you!" the message said. The teams followed the road and found a second note, which included a telephone number and the names of the missing individuals. Roughly a mile further along, officials found the mother and the moment of their rescue, Tami told ABC10 that she first heard a vehicle honk. "I turned around and I saw this truck coming down the road and it was just the best feeling ever." She and Stirling had spent the night in the car to avoid wild animals, and were lucky to have food, she locating the duo, the search team deployed vehicle recovery equipment to free their car and assisted them to return to waiting family determined the pair became lost in part due to a GPS signal that stopped working after they reached a remote area, leaving them unable to retrace their route.


Telegraph
36 minutes ago
- Telegraph
The true scandal of Joe Biden's cognitive decline is about to be blown wide open
It may be difficult to imagine a more informed witness than a doctor in casting light on the cognitive condition of Joe Biden during his four wandering years in office. Unfortunately, Biden's White House physician, Dr Kevin O'Connor, opted to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination during his deposition with the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. The committee is probing the alleged cover-up of Biden's cognitive ability, and whether the autopen – a machine that replicates his signature – was misused to enact major presidential actions without the knowledge or consent of the elected leader of the executive branch. Biden's 'Politburo', however, seems far more likely to be forthcoming. The 'Politburo' refers to the tight cadre of White House aides that surrounded Biden during his presidency – including Michael Donilon, Steve Ricchetti, Bruce Reed, Annie Tomasini, and former first lady Jill Biden's aide Anthony Bernal. Early on, it also included Ron Klain, Biden's first White House chief of staff. According to Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson's book Original Sin, these figures shielded Biden as questions about his mental capacity began to swirl. Now, five of those six have agreed to voluntary interviews with the committee, suggesting that they won't invoke their Fifth Amendment rights. Their answers to questions from the oversight panel, chaired by Rep James Comer (R-Kentucky), are likely to be carefully worded – but anything put on the record might start to peel back the cloak of secrecy over what actually happened. Bernal, who isn't volunteering, was subpoenaed and pleaded the Fifth at his deposition. In other oversight matters, Comer has painstakingly documented information far better than many investigative committee chairs, and we should expect the same in this probe. The Justice Department is also investigating questions surrounding the autopen. If senior aides – wittingly or not – authorised the use of the autopen to sign sweeping pardons, policy edicts, or other significant documents without true presidential authorisation or knowledge, the implications are grave for both democracy and the law. The New York Times has already reported that lists of pardons were sometimes changed in small ways, without Biden necessarily knowing about it. What else went on? The 'Politburo's' appearance – or their equivocations – will be the first public window into how this inner circle really operated. Did they act to defend the public interest, or for reasons of political self-preservation? For how long was Biden truly in command? And if he merely served as figurehead, what does that say about executive accountability? Original Sin, for all the fanfare around its release earlier this year, won't be the last book chronicling Biden's decline. The 46th president's legacy might well be defined by the alleged cover-up. It could well turn into a scandal of truly historic proportions. Woodrow Wilson was an appalling leader on many fronts. Wilson's inner circle hid his debilitating stroke – which left him almost incapacitated in the final years of his presidency. But at least he had real achievements to his name – not least being on the winning side of the First World War. Biden lacks any such cover. Democrats in Congress are annoyed that House Republicans are investigating a president out of office, and accuse the Trump administration's Justice Department of a political vendetta. But yesterday's 'Politburo' may be tomorrow's presidential norm unless Congress says otherwise. The stakes are not small. If major presidential decisions can be made by a small coterie of advisers, while the public is deceived as to the truth, it is not just a political question. It's a major constitutional crisis that cannot simply be brushed under the carpet. Ultimately, this isn't just about Joe Biden, a career politician. It's about the system that allowed him to be propped up like a figurehead, while key decisions may have been made without his understanding or approval. If the elected leader of the country wasn't the one directing major policy or approving decisions, the American people were deceived. What legacy media once insisted was partisan conspiracy theory has now become too serious to ignore.