MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK, Wash. — An armed Iraq War veteran suspected of killing a Mount Rainier National Park ranger managed to evade snowshoe-wearing SWAT teams and dogs on his trail for nearly a day. He couldn’t, however, escape the cold.

A plane searching the remote wilderness for Benjamin Colton Barnes, 24, on Monday discovered his body lying partially submerged in an icy, snowy mountain creek with snow banks standing several feet high on either side.

“He was wearing T-shirt, a pair of jeans and one tennis shoe. That was it,” Pierce County Sheriff’s spokesman Ed Troyer said.

Barnes did not have any external wounds and appears to have died due to the elements, he said. A medical examiner was at the scene to determine the cause of death. Troyer said two weapons were recovered, but he declined to say where they were located.

According to police and court documents, Barnes had a troubled transition to civilian life, with accusations in a child custody dispute that he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder following his Iraq deployments and was suicidal.

The mother of his toddler daughter sought a temporary restraining order against him, according to court documents.

She alleged that he got easily irritated, angry and depressed and kept an arsenal of weapons in his home. She wrote that she feared for the child’s safety. Undated photos provided by police showed a shirtless, tattooed Barnes brandishing two large weapons.

The woman told authorities Barnes was suicidal and possibly suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder after deploying to Iraq in 2007-2008, and had once sent her a text message saying “I want to die.”

In November 2011, a guardian ad litem recommended parenting and communication classes for both parents as well as a visitation schedule for Barnes until he completed evaluations for domestic violence and mental health and complied with treatment recommendations.

Barnes is believed to have fled to the remote park on Sunday to hide after an earlier shooting at a New Year’s house party near Seattle that wounded four, two critically. Authorities suspect he then fatally shot ranger Margaret Anderson.

Immediately after the park shooting, police cleared out Mount Rainier of visitors and mounted a manhunt.

Fear that tourists could be caught in the crossfire in a shootout with Barnes prompted officials to hold more than a 100 people at the visitors’ center before evacuating them in the middle of the night.

Late Sunday, police said Barnes was a suspect in another shooting incident.

On New Year’s, there was an argument at a house party in Skyway, south of Seattle, and gunfire erupted, police said. Barnes was connected to the shooting, said Sgt. Cindi West, King County Sheriff’s spokeswoman.

Police believe Barnes headed to the remote park wilderness to “hide out” following the Skyway shooting.

“The speculation is that he may have come up here, specifically for that reason, to get away,” parks spokesman Kevin Bacher told reporters early Monday. “The speculation is he threw some stuff in the car and headed up here to hide out.”

Anderson had set up a roadblock Sunday morning to stop a man who had blown through a checkpoint rangers use to check if vehicles have tire chains for winter conditions. A gunman opened fire on her before she was able to exit her vehicle, authorities say.

Before fleeing, the gunman fired shots at both Anderson and the ranger that trailed him, but only Anderson was hit.

Anderson would have been armed, as she was one of the rangers tasked with law enforcement, Bacher said. Troyer said she was shot before she had even got out of the vehicle.

Park superintendent Randy King said Anderson, a 34-year-old mother of two young girls who was married to another Rainier ranger, had served as a park ranger for about four years.

King said Anderson’s husband also was working as a ranger elsewhere in the park at the time of the shooting.

The shooting renewed debate about a federal law that made it legal for people to take loaded weapons into national parks. The 2010 law made possession of firearms subject to state gun laws.

Bill Wade, the outgoing chair of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees, said Congress should be regretting its decision.

“The many congressmen and senators that voted for the legislation that allowed loaded weapons to be brought into the parks ought to be feeling pretty bad right now,” Wade said.

Wade called Sunday’s fatal shooting a tragedy that could have been prevented. He hopes Congress will reconsider the law that took effect in early 2010, but doubts that will happen in today’s political climate.

Calls and emails to the National Rifle Association requesting comment were not immediately returned on Monday.

The NRA said media fears of gun violence in parks were unlikely to be realized, the NRA wrote in a statement about the law after it went into effect. “The new law affects firearms possession, not use,” it said.

The group pushed for the law saying people have a right to defend themselves against park animals and other people.

King said the park would remain closed Tuesday as the investigation continued and the rangers grieve the loss of their colleague.

“We have been through a horrific experience,” King said. “We’re going to need a little time to regroup.”

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Associated Press writer Donna Gordon Blankinship contributed from Seattle.

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9 Comments

  1. “The shooting renewed debate about a federal law that made it legal
    for people to take loaded weapons into national parks. The 2010 law made
    possession of firearms subject to state gun laws.”

    That’s ridiculous. Criminals will take loaded weapons into national parks regardless of what the law says.

    1.  That is what the liberal Brady bunch does. They blame legal firearms owners for what criminals do. That is after all the basis for most of the firearms laws in this country.

  2. I wonder where people get the thought that this man involved in shooting would not have gone to Mt Ranier to hide if  guns were not allowed in the park. To put a call out to the NRA and blame them and licensed gun carriers is outlandish and the thought process is beyond my comprehension. I don’t see where it is the NRA’s fault that this obviously ex veteran needed help and was ignored when his family said he was in serious trouble. My heart goes out to the park rangers friends and family and also to the shooters family. This a tragedy I think will repeat itself with a lot of veterans who deserve better after-care from this decade of wars. It is truly sad that they put themselves in harms way to protect all of the citizens of America and it is then our responsibility to be there for them when they are in crisis and the same government that sends them to war drops the ball for their mental and physical health after their service is horrific. Lets hope 2012 is the year the people stand up and cry foul over this issue and many others and take back proper control of our beloved country and all this BS in Washington is showing the whole world we are broken comes to an abrupt halt.  

  3. Tragic!! This is the unseen trauma inflicted upon human beings that have served in a war. No one knows what this man “saw” when he shot this women. I’m sure it wasn’t a 34 year old white female park ranger. This will continue to always be a part of daily life until the world is at peace. Obviously NOT enough money spent on counseling for our veterans.

  4. Bill Wade, the outgoing chair of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees, said Congress should be regretting its decision.
    “The many congressmen and senators that voted for the legislation that allowed loaded weapons to be brought into the parks ought to be feeling pretty bad right now,” Wade said.
    Wade called Sunday’s fatal shooting a tragedy that could have been prevented. He hopes Congress will reconsider the law that took effect in early 2010, but doubts that will happen in today’s political climate.

    Someone has no clue….

  5. Remember if it wasn’t for Mr.Semper Fi and the other branches of the service you would be speaking Japanese, German or some other language.

    1. Yo 96:
      I don’t know if you fall into the UNEDUCATED or UNEDUCABLE  category
      but here are some FACTS for you, not conspiracy theory.
      I met retired FBI  agent Tom Kimmel grandson of Pearl Harbor Admiral Kimmel, in Toronto when I was videotaping The second “International Citizens’ Inquiry into 9-11” (May 2004, Toronto) detailing evidence the US Government created 911
      .
      google  PEARL HARBOR FALSE FLAG OPERATION

      see
      http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/pearl/www.geocities.com/Pentagon/6315/pearl.html
      http://www.bobtuskin.com/2011/06/13/false-flag-operations-past-present-and-the-inevitable-future/
      http://www.apfn.org/apfn/pearl_harbor.htm
      http://911review.com/articles/anon/false_flag_perations.html

      Here is the post you responded to

      for the uneducated and the uneducable

      high school dropout can’t find work so he joins the Marines to Semper Fi
      and collect some money.
      High school dropout is sent to Paris Island to be all he can be. He is trained to kill women and children and a occasional freedom fighter trying to protect his wife from being raped by Mr Semper Fi.
      High school dropout ships out to invade Iraq for USEmpire and US oil companies.
      American oil companies are struggling with the problem of Peak Oil.
      Peak oil means we no longer have a infinite supply of oil.Maybe you saw the documentary film END OF SUBURBIA see
      http://www.endofsuburbia.com/previews.htm

      high school drop out didn’t because his high school teachers were too busy DUMBING him down
      see
      http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/bookstore/dumbdnblum1.htm

      High School dropout manages to kill a couple hundred women and children while throwing in a occasional rape. Mr Sempi Fi has now been transformed into Mr serial killer.
      Mr high school dropout/serial killer now begins to experience extreme depression from his actions. Mental Wealth workers call it Post Traumatic
      Stress Syndrome. But the only people who experience traumatic stress in Iraq are the Iraqi women being raped by Semper Fi’s before they shot and killed them.
      Good thing serial killer/high school dropout has never read the research
      of Ian Stevenson MD whose groundbreaking study of 3,000 children who remember previous lives provides the science for the existence of reincarnation. see
      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1542356/Professor-Ian-Stevenson.html

      What this means for high school dropout is that he will be coming back
      again for another life . Of course so will the people he murdered , so for practical purposes he has another couple hundred lives he has to live getting “wacked” by the life forms he semper fi’d.

      The difference this time is the raped and murdered have had some time to ponder while they wait for him to pass over, how they will “do” Mr Semper Fi- the high school drop out serial killer.

      Mr high school dropout comes back from Iraq out of work unless he re-enlists. There are not to many job openings for serial killers until he lands a job working with his be all you can be buddies at the Bangor police department or the FBI.

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