Going West: True Crime - Darwin Vest // 505
Episode Date: May 27, 2025In June of 1999, a brilliant entomologist vanished into the night after walking home in Idaho Falls. And when police looked into his vanishing, they found many suspicious angles. In a strangely famili...ar situation from three years earlier, he was assaulted while walking home from a bar. And the last person to see him before he went missing left town that same night, with a troubling discovery in his car coming up in police’s search. So what happened to this man that everyone admired? This is the story of Darwin Vest.
Transcript
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What is going on true crime fans? I'm your host T and I'm your host Daphne and you're listening to going West
Hello everybody. Thank you so much for tuning in today
If the title of this episode,
the name of the man we're gonna talk about today
sounds familiar, it is because we covered this case
like within the first year of starting Going West,
but this is one that has really stuck with us
over the years and we felt like because that episode
is not in our catalog anymore,
like our first 100 episodes are gone,
it felt like we just really needed to retell this story
and re-research it.
And it is such a mysterious case.
For any of you guys who listened to the original episode,
you'll know what we're talking about.
It is strange.
Well, without further ado, let's dive back into this case.
All right, guys.
This is episode 506 of Going West, so let's get into it! In June of 1999, a brilliant entomologist vanished into the night after walking home
in Idaho Falls, and when police looked into his vanishing, they found many suspicious
angles.
In a strangely familiar situation three years earlier, he was assaulted while walking home
from a bar, and the last person to see him before he went missing left town that same
night with a troubling discovery in his car coming up in police's search. So what happened to this man that everyone admired?
This is the story of Darwin Vest.
Darwin Vest, who often went by Dar, was born on April 22nd, 1951 in Idaho to Margaret and Waldo Vest, and he had a sister named Rebecca and a brother named David.
Darwin and his siblings grew up in Idaho Falls, which is located in eastern Idaho along the
massive and gorgeous Snake River. And Idaho Falls, I mean, really,
it's chock full with national parks and hiking trails and a
massive waterfall, obviously hence its name, Idaho Falls.
And because of this,
it is known as one of the most beautiful cities in the States.
In 1999, when today's story takes place,
Idaho Falls had a population of about 49,000 people.
So it's a pretty small city
while also being the fourth largest in all of Idaho.
During his upbringing,
Darwin's mother Margaret worked as a licensed cosmetologist,
but she also ventured to work in real estate, sales,
and was very much into photography.
Darwin's father Waldo had fought in World War II
alongside his brother Darwin,
who was actually killed in the military,
but not in a way that you may be imagining.
He actually died in a freak accident
when he fell off a Navy truck
and fractured his skull in 1943.
So Waldo decided to name his son, who was born about eight years later, when he fell off a Navy truck and fractured his skull in 1943.
So Waldo decided to name his son, who was born about eight years later, after his beloved
brother Darwin.
So there was a lot of love for Darwin since the moment he was born.
There was also religion in the household as Darwin and his siblings were raised Mormon,
but he later left the church and considered himself more of an agnostic. I mean, he was very much a man of science and he built his passions and
career around science, specifically entomology, which is the study of insects.
This was a major love of Darwin's.
I think it's pretty interesting that his family was kind of religious, but I
don't know, just making that connection to Darwin, you know what I mean?
Oh, yeah. I wonder if his uncle was named after Charles Darwin or where that name really comes from.
Well, either way, Darwin was a pioneer in the field of entomology, mostly due to his work with the hobo spider, which he helped classify and also name.
Hobo spiders are brown, aggressive house spiders, not to be confused with the brown recluse
spider, which is actually very deadly, and Darwin helped study exactly how dangerous
they really are.
He was fascinated by these creatures.
And after spending much of his time studying their toxicology, he determined that their
bites can cause irreversible tissue damage.
Darwin was self-taught in his field, but he really knew a lot about the subject after
spending many years learning everything he could, particularly about spiders, snakes,
and even poisonous plants.
I mean, his work was so impressive that he would sometimes help the FBI and the CIA with
relevant questions and tests, and sometimes testify about poisonous bites whenever relevant.
He also appeared on the Discovery Channel a few times.
I'm sure that made him proud to do that.
Yeah, it's a really interesting little fun fact there.
And he also went on to own and run a lab called Eagle Rock Research
with his sister Rebecca right there in Idaho Falls.
And I know she helped him a lot with like his research and studies in general. So this
was a shared passion of theirs for sure.
Yeah, and they were super close. But not to confuse you guys, I'm going to go back in
time for a sec before they started their business back to when Darwin was in his early 20s.
Now in the late 1970s Darwin moved an 8 hour drive away to Moscow, Idaho, which is right
on the Idaho-Washington border on the complete opposite side of the state from where he grew
up in Idaho Falls.
And while living there, he was close to Washington State University in Pullman, the Cougars,
which was where he could read textbooks regarding different venomous creatures, and it's also
where he did his own research and studying regarding entomology.
This is when he really started to learn a ton.
And like I mentioned before, he did all of this on his own.
Like he didn't receive a degree or even attend WSU,
but he was able to work alongside the other research scientists
for his own studies.
So it's kind of interesting.
Like he didn't even go to this college.
He would just go to the library and like sit there and study
on his own.
But like what a self-motivated guy.
Like you're not going to the college, but you are and you're
probably studying a lot more than the people who actually go
there just you can learn about a very specific
interest of yours so that you can explore it professionally. Like that's really cool.
I mean, he probably deserved a scholarship. I don't know why he didn't get one.
Well, he lived in Moscow for about 10 years and during his time there
he was also working as a projectionist at a small movie theater called Micro Movie House.
Because not only was he a genius when it came to insects, but he was also a mechanical wiz
as well.
I love Darwin.
I mean, he just seemed like such a passionate and wonderful guy.
Like he just seemed so wholesome and smart.
And I hate that something so mysterious happened to him because clearly he was this awesome human.
Oh yeah, definitely very, very intelligent.
Seemed like he really cared about knowledge and learning.
Great head on his shoulder.
So Darwin worked at the cinema to help support his living
while he studied independently at the university.
And people who came to the theater knew him as Spider-Man.
Like that's what they called him.
And they would sometimes bring different spiders to him there.
Or like, if they got bitten, they would ask him for some advice
because they're like, Darwin's a Spider-Man.
He knows his shit.
That's such a strange thing to do.
It's so cute, though.
No, I know it is.
But like, I'm going to bring some spiders to the movie theater for you to look at.
I can't imagine that many people did that.
Yeah, probably not. You know't imagine that many people did that.
Yeah, probably not.
You know, this is like Idaho and Washington, so lots of Pacific Northwest
scenery. I'm sure there are many instances where you could come across a spider.
But it seemed like he was getting other people into insects as well.
And I actually read this whole write up by a screenwriter named Stephen
Bingham on WorldCinemaParadise.com
regarding the magic of this particular theater that Darwin worked at,
because Stephen himself was also employed there while he was attending the university.
So in his article, he discussed not only the theater, but also how Darwin was like
this maestro in the projection booth and
So much more and here is an excerpt that I really want to read. It's about Darwin
He said quote Darwin was a fascinating guy in a doomed F Scott Fitzgerald sort of way a
Quiet soft-spoken intellectual with a neatly trimmed beard and an air of always being three steps ahead of everyone else, but of being too polite to let on. He once invited me out
for drinks after, or maybe it was before, a shared shift at the micro. All I wanted
to speak about was movies. Usually he was fine with this, but on this night he
seemed to want to talk to me about some mysterious, impenetrable research that he
was engaged
in on campus.
I was still obsessing about the Herzog film our projectors had been mauling that week,
but to be polite, I finally asked him what exactly it was he had been doing behind locked
doors in the chemistry building every day.
He took a drink and then looked around as if spies might be lurking behind the potted
ferns.
Cancer, he finally whispered. You've got it? I've cured it.
He then told me exactly what it was that he had been working on, something venom-related surely, which had somehow led to his mysterious kitchen sink cancer cure. But I could follow what he
told me no more than I could repeat any of it today.
All I can recall is that he said that in every test he had performed,
the cancer cells had retreated.
Darwin said, it needs a lot more work, years of work maybe, but someday.
So obviously, as you guys can tell, we're not just hyping up Darwin for no reason.
I mean, this guy is incredibly smart.
He's sitting there trying to cure cancer in a chemistry lab, and he thinks he's onto
something.
And many people said that they didn't know a single person who didn't like him.
He was very devoted to his work, and he was reportedly asexual.
So he wasn't really focused on romance
or relationships, he was just concentrated on his work.
He did have a girlfriend in the past that was pretty serious, but after they split up,
he didn't really do any dating and just mostly focused on himself and his community.
At Darwin's core, he just really loved science.
And he also loved a good drink.
So when he wasn't working, you could usually find him at a local watering hole having a
beer or possibly a few.
He would sometimes go with friends, but usually he walked to the bar alone.
Because he really enjoyed walking, so that's another thing about Darwin, and he would often
take strolls by the Snake River nightly, especially after
he moved back to Idaho Falls in the 1980s.
But horrifically, in 1996, he was actually assaulted during one of his walks home.
On the evening of Tuesday, March 5, 1996, 44-year-old Darwin walked to a local restaurant
for a late-night solo dinner, as he sometimes would do, minding his own business.
After he ate, he relaxed with a couple alcoholic beverages and enjoyed his quiet time alone.
Now, the rest of the night's events are a little bit foggy in Darwin's memory, but
what he does know is that after leaving this restaurant after 1am, two men got out of a car and mugged
and assaulted him before leaving him for dead.
A little while later, Darwin was discovered beaten yet alive and laying on the side of
the road by local Idaho Falls police, with hardly any memory as to what exactly happened
to him.
The officer helped Darwin get back home and tried to uncover the story of what happened
to him, but he only remembered bits and pieces, and really wasn't able to recall even those
small details until the following day after he rested.
Now like we've mentioned, Darwin wasn't known to have any enemies, so it kind of bewildered
police why someone would physically assault him so viciously, but at that point they just kind of felt like maybe it was a crime of opportunity.
Since Darwin's wallet was missing, police were able to track his bank purchases to try and
find the assailants, and they discovered that Darwin's card was used at a local motel,
and his name was used on the reservation. The card was also used the next day at a restaurant in Idaho Falls and then at a gas station.
So these guys are very much leaving a trail behind them, which is why, with further investigation,
police were quickly able to determine that the men behind Darwin's assault were 31-year-old
Don Ellingford
and another guy named Randy Walker.
Don, at this point, had a pretty extensive criminal record,
mostly regarding drug charges and theft,
and he had been in and out of prison much of his adult life.
So, Idaho Falls police charged him with assault and robbery,
and Darwin told police that he wanted to follow through with the charges
to put Don in prison where he belonged.
I mean, rightfully so.
Darwin did not want to let these guys slide.
But Don, of course, wasn't happy about this.
And once he was officially found guilty of the crimes against Darwin Vest,
he was sentenced to three years in prison.
So in court for all to hear,
Don told Darwin that he was going to get him.
And remember that this happened in 1996 and today's story takes place in
1999, three years later. And by the way,
Don had just gotten out of prison too.
So he was pissed that he had to go back even though it was obviously of his own doing.
Yeah, that's your fault. You idiot.
This feels like a trend though of, you know, guys like him because I feel like we're always talking about how perpetrators blame the victim.
But this really was kind of a chilling thing for this guy to say, especially with what was to come.
Now in early 1999, so about three years after Darwin's assault, things were looking up.
Darwin had invented a hobo spider trap, and since that particular kind of spider is popular
in the Pacific Northwest, and he pitched to Fred Meyer, which is a big PNW supermarket
in hopes of selling it there.
Ah, good old Freddy's.
And in the spring of 1999, they had actually expressed interest
in selling his invention to help people trap these dangerous creatures.
So he not only is helping figure out, he named it this spider,
he helped figure out what makes it so dangerous and what it does.
And now he's helping people catch them in their homes so that they don't get
bitten by them. And because Fred Meyer is such a major store,
this was a big deal for Darwin and his sister, Rebecca,
especially since Darwin had done so much work in this particular field and he
hadn't really made very much money from it at all.
work in this particular field and he hadn't really made very much money from it at all.
And now he finally had this chance at success in something he was really passionate in. But not only this, there was another deal on the table from a different company who wanted the same
spider trap that Darwin signed the very day he went missing. So that night, which was June 2, 1999, Darwin decided that he would celebrate.
And let me paint a little picture of that night for you guys. So it was a brisk,
late spring evening in Idaho Falls, and it was raining. But the rain didn't stop Darwin from
walking to the bar, with the fear from his assault three years prior dissipated
by then.
Now at this time, newly 48 year old Darwin was living at his mother's house in her basement,
which was fairly close to downtown where he spent most of his social time.
This living situation was mostly due to the fact that his father Waldo had died eight
months earlier at the age of 72.
So Darwin, just kind of being the kind hearted man that he was, wanted to help take care
of his mother while he also worked on his inventions from his basement room.
So that night around 8pm, he made the 12 block trek from his home to a popular Idaho Falls
sports pub and eatery called the Frosty Gator, where he met his
friend Eric Seneff for trivia night.
I mean, of course, of course, Darwin is going to be at trivia night.
Oh, yeah, he loves trivia.
Well, after a few pitchers of beer and an evening of trivia, Eric was just ready to
call it a night.
Eric had driven himself downtown that evening, so he offered Darwin a ride home since again,
it was a pretty rainy night.
But Darwin declined and stated that he would walk home as he always did.
So with that, Eric went on his way, but Darwin?
He would mysteriously vanish after this.
Never to be seen again. While Darwin and Eric were at the bar that night again, June 2nd, 1999, they ran into
a 45 year old man named James Curtis who went by Lee and Lee was their casual
acquaintance and fellow Idaho Falls native.
Now Darwin and Lee were not close.
Basically Darwin tolerated Lee.
He wasn't a huge fan of him, but he didn't make a problem of it.
But when Eric left for the evening around 1140 PM, Lee told Eric that he would take care of Darwin,
because at this point, Darwin was pretty intoxicated.
So he's kind of like, you go ahead, Eric, I'll stick back with Darwin.
I'll make sure he's good.
Now, it being a Wednesday, the Frosty Gator reportedly closed at midnight.
So Darwin and Lee actually left within just 20 minutes of Eric
But they decided to keep the night going and they headed over to another bar to continue drinking and hanging out
About two blocks away was a dive bar called the Golden Crown
Which was located in a basement in downtown, Idaho Falls
So after midnight they sat at the bar and had a beer, but shortly afterwards, Lee left by himself and Darwin stayed behind for a little while longer
until around 1 a.m. when he decided
to make the 15-minute-ish walk home.
So Lee left, Darwin left after him.
But weirdly enough, around 15 to 30 minutes after Darwin left,
Lee Curtis returned to the Golden Crown and asked the bartender where Darwin was.
But they told him that he had left. Now, I read from one report that Darwin went to the bathroom,
and when he came back out, Lee was gone. So then Darwin left.
So it was like maybe they had just kind of missed each other in that way.
Kind of like the perfect timing, I guess.
Yeah, exactly.
And so either way, they both left the bar, but then it's just kind of weird that Lee
did come back looking for him.
But anyway, the night passed and morning came and Darwin's mother awoke and couldn't find
Darwin in the house.
And she also hadn't heard him come home the night prior.
So she called around to various people asking if anybody had seen him,
but nobody had.
Obviously, Darwin is a grown man of almost 50,
but this was very unlike him still,
because even if he had stayed out,
whether it was after he met a woman,
even though remember he was asexual, or, you know, he was out having fun with a buddy,
he would have let his mother know that he wasn't going to be home so that she wouldn't worry.
And as far as she knew, he just went to trivia with his buddy, Eric.
But also, he really wasn't known to stay out all night and not return.
So his mother, Margaret, called the Idaho Falls police and reported him missing.
And I just imagine, like in her mind, she was thinking back to three years earlier
when Darwin had been attacked while walking home in their small city of under
50,000 people. So I feel like that coupled with it being unusual that he didn't come home.
She wasn't about to waste any time. Yeah, it definitely makes sense.
She's also an elderly woman and she knows that he's there to take care of her.
So it just doesn't make any sense to her.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, on top of police, Margaret had also called Eric that morning to see if he knew
where Darwin was.
But Eric had been out of town all day with his family.
And this is reportedly a credible, a very credible alibi.
So he didn't even find out until that night that Darwin was missing. Like Eric woke up that morning, went out with his family,
and then came back home later and was like, wait, Darwin's missing? What?
The last I saw of him, he was at the bar with Lee.
And then Eric went right out and looked for Darwin.
He has been such an advocate in finding his friend.
And although Eric was not the last person to see Darwin,
he was one of the last.
So he was brought down to the station as soon as police reached him
just to give a report of what happened the night before.
And really just how uneventful it was. as soon as police reached him just to give a report of what happened the night before and really
just how uneventful it was. You know, they had some beers together before Eric left without him.
But he did provide something helpful to police that Lee Curtis was one of the last people to see
Darwin. Well, since Lee had also gone out of town that day, he wasn't able to be questioned
by police immediately.
But his family explained to police on his behalf that Lee had been dropped off at home
that morning around 1am by a taxi, which was confirmed.
But the members of his family reported that he had gotten home at different times, so
it's pretty hard to confirm exactly when he walked through the door that
evening.
Especially when you add the fact that he had allegedly returned to the bar in search of
Darwin after Darwin himself had left, so it was just all very convoluted.
After about a week, police finally got in touch with Lee, who had already heard that
Darwin had gone missing, but hadn't gone to the police on his own with his account on the night.
And basically to explain this, he said that he had to get back to Utah for a military
event of sorts, which was supposed to explain his sudden departure back home.
Though police still found this very strange, especially considering the fact that Lee left
that same night to Utah, which is where he lived.
He was only in Idaho Falls visiting family, meaning that he had been out drinking and then
left to go to a different state that very night.
That's just kind of weird.
Like if he was there visiting family and you know that you have to leave that night to go
back home to a different state,
which to be fair, Salt Lake City is only like three hours away from Idaho Falls,
but still you go out drinking until one in the morning and then you take a taxi home
instead of driving because you've probably had some drinks,
but you're able to drive hours back home to Utah.
That's just so weird to me.
It is pretty strange.
I mean, I wonder if like maybe he slept it off
for like an hour or two and then ended up driving three hours.
But-
But still why?
Like why do the, why not just go back to Utah?
Yeah, I don't know.
Well, Lee explained to police that on the night
that Darwin disappeared, Darwin was very drunk.
According to Lee, he tried to get Darwin to drink coffee, but instead, he ordered another
beer which he did not finish.
During the 15-30 minutes that Lee was gone, he was allegedly at a local ATM getting some
cash.
But when the ATM wasn't working, he returned to the bar to find Darwin.
And when Darwin wasn't at the bar anymore, Lee called a cab and he just simply went home.
But there was a lot of complications with his story because Lee said that he just couldn't
remember much else.
Yeah, like a week had passed.
He had been at another bar that night, obviously with Darwin, so he couldn't really remember
the events other than that.
But it was definitely feeling a little bit fishy.
And according to police reports, they thought of Lee as a potential suspect
enough to search his car, and when they did, they found traces
of a substance that appeared to be blood.
Obviously, just because it appears to be blood does not mean that it is,
but it was weird enough to them
that they collected the evidence for processing.
But that particular evidence got lost
and never ended up getting tested,
which it's obviously so frustrating
when this happens in cases anyway,
but like this is literally the only potential piece of evidence
we have and you lost it.
And it's gone.
I really don't understand how this happens.
It happens in so many fucking cases.
Like you would think if this is connected to a missing,
if there's a piece of evidence from a missing person's case,
you're going to be more careful with it,
especially because they never tested it.
So why? I don't know.
It's so infuriating and it's so important because this very much could have not been
blood.
It could have been ketchup.
It could have been a stain of some other kind.
But now we just don't know.
Well nothing else was found in Lee's home or his car that pointed to him having anything
to do with Darwin's disappearance.
And they didn't have a body. So police still weren't even sure
if foul play was a viable option.
And this is where the Snake River comes into play
because Lee told police that he wondered
if Darwin had simply fallen in on his way home,
which makes you wonder if this is like a helpful suggestion or an attempt at throwing suspicion in the other direction.
So you guys know the Snake River is about three blocks away from the area that
Darwin was bar hopping in that night. But to go home,
he would not have passed by this river.
It would have been out of the way to walk along the river and it would not have
led to his
mother's house. And although he was drunk, it's very unlikely that he would have taken a detour
or gotten lost because it was raining. He already had a 15 minute or so walk ahead of him. And as
we know, he grew up in Idaho Falls. He made this very walk countless times. Yeah. And I'm sure he
made that walk countless times drunk as well.
It's like one of those things where you just kind of like you're not.
No matter how drunk you get, you know your way back home
from the bar that you often go to.
Yeah, it's like you're on autopilot.
Yeah. But still, police started to consider, of course,
at least consider the possibility that he fell into the Snake River anyway.
Also, so you guys know,
the Snake River is one of the major rivers
in the Pacific Northwest
and the ninth largest in the whole United States.
It goes from Washington, partially into Oregon,
all across Idaho, and then into Wyoming.
So it is very large.
And creepily enough, the day after Darwin's disappearance,
a woman called the police stating that she believed
she saw the body of a man floating down the Snake River that morning,
which would have been probably over 24 hours after Darwin went missing
because he disappeared again
on the early morning hours of June 2nd
and she called police on June 3rd.
So it's hard because this report
has not been released to the public.
So we don't know if she's talking about
the morning of June 2nd or the morning of June 3rd,
but either way, this woman lived just south of Idaho Falls
and this could make sense because the river runs south.
So if Darwin had either fallen into the river or been killed and thrown into the river,
his body would have gone south down the river, meaning this woman's sighting could be correct from these facts alone.
But by the time police got to this area, they didn't find anything.
See, I kind of want a little more detail on this witness sighting or this account because,
I mean, it's a river. It's June. People float the river all the time.
True.
So is it possible that somebody was just floating the river or was she close enough to go,
hey, that person is fully clothed and they're floating down the river
and it looks like a body.
That's so true.
That is what can be so dangerous about sightings like this.
As we've talked about across many other cases,
sometimes people report seeing a particular person that's in the news
or they've seen a missing poster and they say,
hey, I saw that girl this morning.
And then it turns out that she, you know, when they find her body, she was dead
before that person made the sighting.
So it's like, is what this woman's saying even true?
Was it a dead body?
Was it Darwin?
But it's so hard because when you mention something like this in a case like this,
a lot of people automatically will write it off and say, oh, well, that was probably just him.
But without way more details, we really don't know.
And the sad thing here is that police themselves admitted that the search that they did of
that river was not very thorough.
Since rivers flow at different speeds, depending on various factors, we're not sure how fast
the river runs past Idaho Falls.
And the same thing goes for the
depth. You know, that varies as well depending on where you are. So we can't really be sure about
this either. But we do know that there's a large dam there, and the river appears to be very wide,
and likely pretty deep as well in Idaho Falls, east and parallel to the bars downtown.
Water temperatures around this time of year were usually around 60 degrees Fahrenheit
or 15.5 degrees Celsius, but since there was still snow runoff from the colder months,
it definitely could have been a lot colder.
And just so you guys know, at 50 degrees Fahrenheit or 10 degrees Celsius, you can freeze to death
within an hour.
So did Darwin walk down to the river for a relaxing walk home?
Did someone put him in the river?
Or is this phone call completely unrelated to Darwin's disappearance?
And those close to Darwin do not believe that he would have fallen into the river, even
if he was drunk. Not only does this area along the river not really give anybody an easy opportunity to
simply fall in, but they feel that he was too cautious for this to occur.
And again, it really wouldn't have made that much sense for him to be walking by the river
at all that night.
Also, Darwin went missing wearing Levi's 501 jeans and a black leather jacket, but
the apparent man in the river had a completely different outfit on.
Though police haven't publicly reported exactly what the woman claimed he was wearing, but
it was different enough to cast some major doubt in their minds.
Well other than Lee, someone that should come to mind in Darwin's disappearance is
Don Ellington, the man who had assaulted him on the streets of Idaho Falls three years
earlier.
But, at the time Darwin went missing, Don was still incarcerated for his crimes against
Darwin, and this was confirmed by prison officials. The night that Darwin went missing again, June 2nd, 1999,
there were apparently three bed checks done
that confirmed Don's presence.
And since his sentence was almost complete,
it does kinda seem silly
that he would risk more jail time anyway
by essentially putting a hit on Darwin.
He was so mad that he had to go back for those three years as it was.
Even though it is definitely possible that he had someone, you know, like get rid of Darwin for him
to keep his word from court because remember he told Darwin that he would get him.
But of course there was just no evidence that anything like this happened.
Yeah and also him saying I'm gonna get you could have just been the heat of
the moment upset thing. That doesn't necessarily mean he had a plan.
Sure. But it's very interesting.
Now, we do know that Don had a 27 year old nephew who lived in this area,
in the Idaho Falls area, and his name is Michael.
And the day after Darwin went missing, police were called to a home in Idaho
Falls after
neighbors reported hearing the sound of windows being broken.
Police reported to the scene and upon arrival, heard what seemed to be the sound of a shotgun
being pumped.
That's when they found an intoxicated Michael Ellingford inside and they arrested him, since they had multiple warrants out for his arrest.
So all that to say, Don's nephew Michael was in Idaho Falls
and had been committing other crimes.
So it is possible that he could have had some kind of
involvement after being directed by his uncle Don.
But again, we don't have any hard evidence to support these claims.
Now I did find something on Reddit
that I found interesting.
Obviously Reddit is an open forum,
so take this with a grain of salt.
But a commenter named Cody said on a Darwin Vest thread,
quote, my mom was married to Don's nephew, Mike,
so Michael, in the early 2000s.
Mike was the kind of guy who would sell people sheetrock
when they'd screw him over on drug deals
and beat up gay people at the Fruit Loop,
which was a gay meetup spot.
So he's just a piece of shit.
Yeah, very much so.
He continues saying,
I posted a few years ago on Idaho cold cases
that I remember my ex-stepdad talking about Darwin Vest and I
remember asking him if he did murder him.
He purposefully made himself look suspicious, but it didn't seem genuine.
The SWAT team was called to Mike's house because he was intoxicated on a certain upper drug
and shot out the window of his house, like next day or very shortly after the disappearance.
IFPD believe that he could have been a suspect as well.
They even came and excavated the backyard to see if Darwin was buried there.
Someone messaged me related to Darwin Vest and asked me to help give more information,
but I have nothing concrete that he murdered Darwin Vest.
My mom seems to recall that Don, Mike,
and some other guy beat up Darwin
sometime before the disappearance,
maybe the same as referenced in the original poster story,
which is how the Ellingfords are related to this.
My mom thinks they should find out
who that third person was, but other than that,
she'd have turned him over
in a heartbeat had she known
that he really did murder someone.
So yeah, obviously what he's talking about there
is the incident that I just relayed
and it seems like he and his mom don't know
that that third guy was named,
or I guess the second guy in the attack on Darwin in 1996.
But it has not been publicly released
what police have to say about the other guy, Ricky, Darwin in 1996, but it has not been publicly released what
police have to say about the other guy Ricky and if it seems
like he was involved or what really happened there.
Yeah, I mean, there's a few other key players that were free
men when Darwin went missing.
Well, this is the end of that guy's comment.
He said, quote, Don apparently was murdered at the end of
December in a trailer in
Reery though Mike lives in Nevada now
So yeah, Don Ellingford was killed at age 56 by a gunshot wound in December of 2020
And the shot that killed him was fired from outside of his camper trailer and his killer
Still hasn't been identified.
So that's pretty wild.
Yeah, that's a pretty wild, like just kind of offshoot to Darwin's case.
But it makes you wonder if Don was involved.
If I said Ricky before, it's Randy.
I don't know why I said Ricky.
No, it's OK. Yeah, we know what you meant.
Randy.
Randy. I don't know what's up with Randy.
I don't know if I'm assuming that Don was killed by somebody because of his other crimes
and maybe his involvement in drugs or something like this feels like it was a hit.
Well, something really strange about Don is during June of 1999, he was a part of this
program at the Idaho Falls Correctional Facility where they let the inmates out during the
days to work, but they would have to return at night.
As we know, those nighttime bed checks did happen, but that doesn't account for the
daytime, leaving many to wonder if Dawn had at least planned something that day for Darwin.
Because also, the following evening, an inmate in that same facility escaped and didn't
return that night,
and no one noticed for many hours. So many believe that Don Allingford could have escaped
that night undetected, killed Darwin, and then returned without being noticed.
Even though that sounds kind of insane.
Kind of sounds like a movie, doesn't it?
Yeah.
Pretty far-fetched. Well, Darwin's family has expressed that they believe
that it is a possibility. But that's obviously the problem with this case. You know, there's
no evidence and just a lot of different strange things of note that don't concretely steer us
towards any conclusion. And then, of course, many people wonder if his spider trap business
could have been at the epicenter of what happened to him, like a jealous
competitor or someone who wanted the money that he was getting from the new deals that he was landing.
Though he hadn't even received payouts yet, so this doesn't hold a lot of weight.
Well, in March of 2004, just shy of five years after he went missing,
Darwin was legally declared dead by his family,
who were heartbroken and still at a complete loss as to what happened to him.
Over the years, many tips have come in regarding Darwin's disappearance, some of which include
theories and leads that Darwin was targeted and murdered, but none of these leads have
brought police answers. To this day, his family maintains the belief that foul play is involved.
And none of those close to him believe that he could have or would have fallen into the Snake River.
Of course, that does not mean that that's not what happened, but we really don't have evidence of anything.
So at this point, Darwin's case appears to be at a standstill.
There are persons of interest in the case that police have kept quiet on.
And there are many other details and rabbit holes that they have not shared
with the public just in order to keep the integrity of the investigation,
especially if he really was met with foul play.
No matter what happened to Darwin, his family is desperate for answers.
Sadly, his mother Margaret passed away in May of 2011,
so 12 years after Darwin went missing.
Her obituary reads, quote, Margaret was defined by her unfailing
optimism, unconditional love and faith in herself, God, and her family.
She endured the loss of her husband and son with uncompromising grace and dignity.
As we know, Dawn has since passed away from murder,
and Lee Curtis died in his home in July of 2015 at the age of 61.
If you have any information regarding the disappearance of Darwin Vest,
please call the Idaho Falls Police Department at 208-529-1200.
Thank you so much everybody for listening to this episode of Going West. Yes, thank you guys so much for listening to this episode.
I really feel like this is one of the most mysterious cases we've talked about on this
show and not just because of the disappearance, but honestly because
Darwin was such an interesting person.
He's such an interesting character, a highly intelligent man, and I hope that one day we
find out what happened to Darwin Vest.
I know, I really hope this doesn't go cold forever because, like you're saying, he was
such an amazing man, his family wants to know what happened so bad.
And they must be so frustrated after all this time
that there really is no concrete evidence pointing to answer.
So please share his story.
Thank you guys so much for tuning into this one.
Let us know if you want us to like recover old episodes
because maybe you heard them years ago
and you wouldn't mind hearing them again,
or you weren't around five years ago to hear this when we originally covered it.
So let us know your thoughts.
Thank you guys so much and we will see you on Friday.
All right, guys.
So for everybody out there in the world, don't be a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a little bit of a I'm gonna be a man, I'm gonna be a man
I'm gonna be a man, I'm gonna a little bit of a wimp. Thanks for watching!