Park Predators - (BONUS) The Ranger
Episode Date: August 31, 2021A park ranger in Hot Springs National Park stumbles upon an illegal alcohol operation and pays the ultimate price. His murderers are still unaccounted for, leaving everyone in Arkansas mystified for n...early 100 years. Who really killed National Park Ranger James Cary and is the answer somewhere bubbling just beneath the surface?Sources for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit https://parkpredators.com/the-ranger-bonus/ Park Predators is an audiochuck production. Connect with us on social media:Instagram: @audiochuckTwitter: @audiochuckFacebook: /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck
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Hi, park enthusiasts. I'm your host, Delia D'Ambra, and the story I'm going to tell you about today is the first of its kind in American national park history.
The brutal murder of a park ranger in a line of duty. It's also the oldest case I've ever covered on this show.
It's the story of James Alexander Carey from 1927, and it's one of the most baffling murder investigations in a park
land that I've ever read about. It takes place in Hot Springs National Park in Arkansas at the
height of the Prohibition era. Throughout the decades, the park itself has lured visitors
with stories that the waters from the natural thermal springs have healing powers, and the jury is still out on that one.
But back in 1927, the park also attracted the attention of unsavory characters operating the illegal liquor trade, aka bootleggers and gangsters. And caught right in the middle
was park ranger James Carey, who went out on a routine patrol, never to be seen alive again.
This is Park Predators.
December 7th, 1926, was a cold day as 31-year-old park policeman James Carey made his way through the forested terrain and icy creeks of Hot Springs National Park.
James was patrolling like every other day, making sure the trails in the park were clear of debris
and no one was around doing things they shouldn't be. The conditions in winter were harsh, but lately weren't as hard to bear. It was much
worse back when James first took the job almost four years earlier. Before that, he fought in
World War I for the United States Navy. So his long patrols through the park's woods and thermal
springs were definitely a welcome change of scenery
compared to those long stints stationed aboard the USS Orient, cramped up with hundreds of other sailors.
Wartime overseas was long over, but James was fighting a new kind of enemy,
one operating inside of the national park he was charged with protecting.
While hiking his route near a ridge in the park known as West
Mountain, James stopped and noticed something odd in the distance. He saw three men hauling
containers that looked like they were full of some type of dark liquid. Immediately, James realized
what he was looking at. Bootleggers. Criminals illegally hauling gallons of liquor to and from hiding spots in the mountains.
This had been an ongoing problem in Hot Springs National Park, and James had personally made it
his mission to see to it that these smugglers were arrested and prosecuted. Two of the men James saw
seemed to be the ones possessing the contraband, while the third guy just gestured suggesting an
exchange of some sort.
James continued to watch the men barter, and when it appeared they finished their deal,
he moved in. While he attempted to arrest the trio for violating liquor laws and doing so on
federal land, one of the men, named Raymond Hunt, escaped. A few hours later, Raymond showed up at
Hot Springs Police Headquarters and turned himself in.
He made a point to tell the police that he would face the penalty for his crimes,
but he wanted to make it clear that he would not let Park policeman James Carey be the person to put him in handcuffs.
Raymond Hunt, Walter Weldon, and Ed Halsey were all subsequently charged with violating liquor laws.
and Ed Halsey were all subsequently charged with violating liquor laws. A few days later,
at their first court hearing, Raymond and Walter were federally indicted, but the case against Ed was dismissed. His lawyer was somehow able to show that Ed was not connected with the transaction.
Prosecutors who took the remaining defendants to a grand jury, planned to rely solely on James Carey's testimony when the case was
scheduled to go to trial in April of 1927. That trial was supposed to take place at the federal
courthouse in Little Rock, Arkansas. According to the Arkansas Gazette, James told colleagues with
the Park Service that he wouldn't be surprised if he ran into trouble with the defendants or
their associates prior to testifying.
James knew that making the arrest was going to ruffle feathers in the illegal liquor trade gangs,
but he didn't care all that much. He felt what he'd done was just and necessary to prove to
criminals that they could not hide contraband in the National Park. James arresting Raymond,
Walter, and Ed was no surprise. It was known in Hot Springs that
liquor was being stowed away and hidden in secluded spots all over the mountains. Bootleggers would
often distill liquor in the woods of Garland County, then transport it into the city at night
via roads that were almost never patrolled. According to an article on the City of Hot
Springs website, the park was infamous in the late
1800s and early 1900s for being a haven for criminals, gangsters, and people running illegal
gambling and liquor rings. There were even accusations that these criminal enterprises
had gotten so powerful that they had police officers and judges in their pockets who would turn blind eyes to the illegal industry.
In early January 1927, while the three defendants James had arrested were awaiting their trial, they were released on bail.
A few months later, on March 12, 1927, around 8 p.m.,
Hot Springs National Park Superintendent Joseph Bolton was walking to his office at the park's headquarters when he noticed something odd.
The flag flying on a pole above the building was still up.
Joseph knew that was unusual because typically at the end of the day, the park ranger on duty would lower the flag.
Joseph thought it was strange, especially because he knew that James Carey was the ranger on shift that night,
and James never neglected his duties before leaving for the day.
James had an impeccable record as a park policeman ever since he joined the service four years ago.
He worked 56 hours a week, eight hours a day, and never had a single blemish on his service record.
Joseph couldn't shake the feeling that something wasn't right,
so he checked with witnesses who stated the last time they'd seen James,
it was around 4.15 p.m.
When they spotted him, James was leaving the park headquarters in his patrol car.
Joseph's concern for James grew worse when he walked further down the road from his office
and noticed something else odd outside
of the Springs bathhouses. The entire road that ran alongside the bathhouses was dark. No one had
turned on the lights. This was a clear red flag to Joseph that James had never been over to this area
or completed his duties for the day. Joseph was worried because he knew that bootleggers and
people involved in illegal
activities had a history of roaming the park and the nearby roads at night. Pretty soon, an all-out
search began to try and find James. The superintendent sounded a general alarm and sent
out squads of men with the park service to look for the missing officer. Their starting point was
an area of the park called West Mountain, and it literally
is a mountain. Joseph knew that a big section of James's routine patrol route was West Mountain
and the roads surrounding it. Within a few hours, searchers found James's patrol car, an old-timey
looking Ford Touring, which if you google pictures of this car, you'll see what I mean. It sort of
looks like a classic Model T,
and it was parked near the summit of West Mountain, with the driver's door swung wide open.
Reports are a bit slim on the details. Some publications from 1927 say the car was located sometime between 8 o'clock and 10 o'clock at night on Saturday, March 12th, but other reports say it
was found at dawn the morning of Sunday,
March 13th. I don't know exactly which one is right, but I think it's safe to say that by
daybreak on Sunday, they knew the last place James had been, and that was on West Mountain.
According to the Arkansas Gazette, shortly after 6 a.m., James's brother, brother-in-law,
and father-in-law, who were walking along Gem Street,
came upon James's bloody body lying in a ravine at the base of the mountain. The spot was only
about a quarter mile downhill from where searchers found his abandoned patrol car.
Gem Street was the road that led to West Mountain. It was also a common route that
bootleggers would take to smuggle liquors to hiding spots inside of the park. The answer to the question of how James had gotten down to where he
was found seemed obvious. He'd confronted someone there, and they'd shot him. The real question was,
did James see something suspicious and go to his killers, or had the shooter been lying in wait and ambushed him? Officers didn't
find James's service weapon on his body. According to reports, it was normal practice back then for
Park police officers to pay for their own uniforms and weapons. James did own a revolver he carried
with him while on duty, but it wasn't on him that day. When police spoke with James's father, he told police that he was
in possession of James's revolver and had been all weekend. The gun had originally been James's
father's service weapon years ago, and James often would borrow it while on duty. So it was clear
that whoever shot James didn't use his revolver to kill him. The killer had brought their own.
Almost as soon as James Carey's body was found, police told reporters that they expected the
investigation was going to wrap up quickly and the people responsible would be apprehended.
The park's superintendent, Joseph Bolton, notified the park's director that
James was dead and that the investigation suggested he'd been ambushed. Joseph told the director that
law enforcement personnel from all over Garland County, the city of Hot Springs, and park service
employees were working to find the shooter or shooters. He asked the director to approve a request to send in federal agents
from the U.S. Bureau of Investigations. That request wasn't immediately approved.
A day after the murder, officers combing the mountainside found James's watch. It was located
a good ways away from where his body had been discovered. Police believed that meant whoever
had killed him stripped it from his corpse,
then for some reason ditched it in the park. The watch itself was an interesting clue because it
had stopped ticking at 5 p.m. This told investigators that more than likely that was around the precise
time James had been killed. They thought either the mechanisms in the watch had stopped when James
fell to the ground, or they'd been damaged when the watch was tossed down the road from his body.
A woman who had been just outside the park on Saturday afternoon told police that she heard
a gunshot between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m., so that definitely lined up with the watch telling the
time of death theory.
When investigators took a close look at James' clothing, they found bloody fingerprints on the lining of one of his pant pockets. They compared James' fingerprints to those bloody ones,
and they were not a match. So this led authorities to believe that whoever left those bloodstains
inside James' pocket was likely the killer, and they'd rummaged
through his trousers after shooting him. Nothing of any value was missing, though. Just a few scraps
of paper were strewn around his body. Initially, some people thought, just by looking at the crime
scene, that the bloody fingerprints could have been a sign that James himself had reached into
his pocket to grab a
handkerchief to plug up his wound and stop the bleeding. But once police confirmed the bloody
fingerprints did not belong to James, that theory fell apart. When the local coroner did an autopsy
on James's body, he'd found that James had died from a.45 caliber gunshot fired at close range.
The doctor knew that whoever had fired at James
had to have been really close to him when they killed him because of evidence found on his
clothing and skin. The autopsy report stated that based on where holes were in James's shirt
and where they weren't on his coat, it was likely that when he was shot, he was in a physical fight
with someone. It appeared that James had been wrestling for something while being overtaken.
The report stated that a bullet definitely pierced James' right shoulder, just a few inches below his neck.
The shot never passed through his coat, though, only his shirt.
It entered sort of sideways and traveled through James' right shoulder blade,
then passed through his body in a direct line, eventually lodging near his left shoulder. There are a few reports though
that I found that indicate some officials initially believed James may have been shot twice.
These officials suggested the autopsy showed a second small bullet near James's left shoulder
that wasn't consistent with an exit wound. They believed
this mystery hole indicated James could have been shot from a distance, perhaps with a small caliber
rifle first, then his attacker ran up on him and fired the.45. A rifle wound from afar would
likely not have killed James, so his attackers would have had to walk close to him and fire a second fatal shot.
Investigators speculated that as the shooter approached James is when that scuffle of some
sort happened. The final ruling from the coroner states that the only sure bullet hole was the one
in James's neck. The angle of that shot indicated that James's right arm was likely raised with the
front of his coat thrown open or somewhat hanging off of him when the shot was fired.
There was no bullet hole found in the coat, but there was one in his shirt.
The area around the hole in the shirt and on his skin where the bullet entered was severely burned, meaning that the muzzle flash likely had direct contact with his shirt and body.
The prevailing theory that drove police's investigation was that James had come across
someone in the park associated with bootlegging. Officers reviewing James's previous record of
busting up such crimes noticed that where his body was was only 50 feet away from where he'd
arrested three men a few months earlier on West
Mountain. That incident was when he'd caught Raymond Hunt, Ed Halsey, and Walter Weldon
smuggling and exchanging five gallons of distilled liquor back on December 7th.
Officers found it suspicious that James, who was set to be the sole witness against those men,
was now dead in the same spot where their arrests had happened.
Authorities believed one of two things had occurred.
James likely stumbled upon the same kind of smugglers using West Mountain seclusion to
transport liquor, or perhaps he was lured to the spot and murdered.
The biggest clue supporting that second theory was information police gathered that indicated, prior to his death, James had received an anonymous tip that bootleggers were going to be moving a big stash on West Mountain the evening of Saturday, March 12th.
Police uncovered that earlier in the afternoon on Saturday, a man had been walking on Gem Street near West Mountain's Ridge, asking about James and when and where he usually
patrolled. Officers suspected that James had been set up, and when he drove his patrol car to West
Mountain Saturday night, he had no idea what he was walking into. Police began rounding up anyone
and everyone who had been arrested or suspected of liquor violations in Garland County and the city of Hot Springs. This included all of the men James had previously arrested in December 1926,
the guys that had all conveniently been out on bail awaiting trial.
And when police found them, the entire trajectory of the case changed.
of the case changed. Local and state law enforcement officers investigating James Carey's murder split up into groups and started running down men James had previously arrested
for bootlegging. The first to be apprehended was Raymond Hunt and Walter Weldon. The others were David Camp, an associate of Ed Halsey's,
who was a former arrestee of James's,
and a man named Chester Henderson.
Police found Walter sleeping inside the house
of the female witness who'd come forward
and told police she heard a gunshot on Saturday afternoon.
Raymond was located at his home.
When police searched the inside,
they found a bloody shirt and a bloody pair of pants in his closet.
The other men were detained because of their known associations with Raymond and Walter and previous violations of liquor laws.
According to the Arkansas Gazette, on March 13th, a police constable in Hot Springs named John Young and a Garland County deputy began searching for two other men they suspected were involved in the killing.
Police had gotten intel that two guys, Lawrence Wilson and Garland Doc Weldon,
had been inside the national park the day James was murdered.
They were also known associates of Raymond Hunt.
On March 14th, police Constable John Young located Lawrence and
Doc 15 miles north of the National Park. They were at a farm owned by Lawrence's father. At the farm,
police seized a Winchester rifle they believed could have been used in the killing. Lawrence's
father told police that he found the rifle beside one of his barns on Sunday morning.
One of Lawrence's brothers, Roy Wilson, told police that he and his father had shot the rifle in the woods the day prior,
but when investigators asked his dad about that detail, his father said Roy had lied.
So, officers detained Roy along with Lawrence and Doc.
When the men got to the city jail, officers began questioning them about the crime, but they all refused to talk.
The Gazette reported at that time police told reporters they had evidence that strongly pointed to Roy, Lawrence, and Doc being involved, but they didn't explain what that evidence was.
but they didn't explain what that evidence was.
All police would tell the press was that Lawrence and Doc were known to be inside the park with two girls the Saturday evening James was murdered.
The women that had been with the men came forward to police and spilled the beans.
They told officers that while they were with Lawrence and Doc on Saturday afternoon,
the two men had been drinking a lot,
and the entire time the group was together,
they'd both been behaving nervously. Police took these women's stories into consideration,
but their stories alone weren't what convinced detectives that Lawrence and Doc were somehow involved. It was actually something much more obvious. Doc Weldon was actually the brother
of Walter Weldon, the same Walter Weldon that James Carey had arrested three months earlier for bootlegging inside of the National Park.
Police believed that Doc may have been seeking revenge against James Carey for having arrested his brother the year before.
Investigators believed Roy, Lawrence, and Doc, along with Raymond, David, Walter, and Chester,
had all conspired to kill James.
Their motive?
The trial against Raymond and Walter,
in which James was going to be the star witness,
was scheduled for April 1927,
one month after the murder.
The police's theory was that the men
simply had to get rid of James Carey.
Proving that theory, though, and getting the resources they needed wasn't going to be easy.
On March 23rd, Hot Springs National Park Superintendent Joseph Bolton's request for federal assistance was officially denied.
Attorney General at the time, determined that the federal government and agents with the U.S. Bureau of Investigations technically did not have jurisdiction in Hot Springs National
Park.
And this was true.
According to a report from the National Park Rangers Lodge, in 1927, it wasn't yet a
federal crime to kill a park ranger.
On top of that, back then, the U.S. government didn't actually have exclusive jurisdiction of West Mountain.
According to historic records, the state of Arkansas didn't formally surrender jurisdiction of that land to the federal government until 1933.
On March 15, 1927, James Carey's family held his funeral, and he was buried 14 miles outside of the boundary of the park.
James left behind his wife, Thelma,
and their five-year-old son, James Orvis,
and eight-month-old daughter, Leora.
To help cope with the loss of her husband,
Thelma actually had James' sister move in,
which really wasn't that big of a move
because James' sister's house actually joined Thelma and his.
The shock of the killing, though, not only rippled through the family, but through all of Garland County.
Authorities who were furious that people involved in liquor sales were likely behind the killing
began cracking down hard on alcohol operations.
The Arkansas Gazette reported that three days after the murder,
Garland County's prosecuting attorney filed formal complaints against five establishments in the city
that were suspected bootlegging headquarters. The DA's move was successful. He was able to get a
judge to sign off on temporary padlock orders that closed down several of those places. A lot of the people named as the operators
of these booze barns were husbands and wives or members of the same family. According to the
Arkansas Gazette, every single person, with the exception of one woman, had previously been
arrested for bootlegging or had been on the county's court docket in some form or fashion.
The news article also stated that each
location had previously been raided and the owners were cited on suspicion of either making alcohol
or harboring it. One of the homes that was shut down was a backdoor speakeasy that several soldiers
in the U.S. Army and Navy told authorities they'd bought whiskey and other liquor from over the years. So the people
behind these alcohol fronts definitely had a history of being on police's radar, but for some
reason it seemed like they time and time again just kept popping back up after a few weeks of
going underground. The county's head attorney wanted to finally put a stop to that. So he petitioned another judge to
make the padlock orders permanent. He told the Arkansas Gazette the whiskey business was, quote,
a threat against the lives of all officers, and we intend to accept the challenge, end quote.
While the DA waited to see if the padlock orders would stick for good,
several months passed with nothing materializing in the murder case.
Police officials who detained the five men suspected of the crime
never got a confession from any of them,
and investigators were never able to link any evidence directly to them.
Because of that, police had to release the men.
Police reports are vague,
but the next update in the case didn't come until January of 1928, police had to release the men. Police reports are vague,
but the next update in the case didn't come until January of 1928,
nearly a year after James was murdered.
His widow, Thelma,
wrote a letter to two U.S. senators in Arkansas
pleading with them
to help investigate her husband's murder.
She wrote that she felt
the local investigation in the case
wasn't getting
any real results, and she was upset that no one had been formally charged. Within just days of
receiving her letter, the two senators launched a formal inquiry into the case. After a few weeks
of investigating, staff in charge of the probe uncovered that there were serious problems in how
the murder investigation was handled by
Garland County Sheriff's Office and the Hot Springs City Police Department. The most damning accusation
came from Hot Springs National Park Superintendent Joseph Bolton, who wrote in a letter that local
police did not perform harsh enough interrogations with the known suspects. While that was all happening, Thelma,
James' wife, took her own initiative. She decided to offer up a $500 reward for her husband's killer.
The people living in Hot Springs matched her funds with another $500, bringing the total to $1,000,
which back in those days was a lot of money. According to saving.org, that's worth about $15,000 in today's currency.
But even with so much money up for grabs, 1928 dragged on with no movement in the case.
Thelma continued to press officials on the state and federal level.
She wrote a letter to the U.S. Secretary of the Interior asking him to get
involved because she was worried that authorities in Hot Springs might be part of a bigger cover-up.
In her letter, Thelma accused Park Superintendent Joseph Bolton of conspiring with the suspects in
the case to have James killed. She said James kept a notebook of observations he made around the park and
information he was investigating in the months leading up to his murder. A lot of that info
pertained to James uncovering misdeeds by the Department of the Interior's officials.
One entry Thelma had found read that James suspected a man with the initials J.S.B.,
read that James suspected a man with the initials JSB, a.k.a. Joseph S. Bolton, was in the habit of tipping off bootleggers and gangs if Prohibition officers or park rangers were onto them.
Contents of the notebook also indicated that Hot Springs Chief of Police, William Brandberg, was also involved.
Thelma suggested that the reason her husband's pockets had been rifled
through after he was shot was because the killer had been looking for his notebook.
But James didn't have it on him that day. He left it at home. Thelma said the Department of the
Interior took James's notebook from her, and according to reports, it was never seen again.
In September 1929, J. Edgar Hoover, director of the U.S. Investigation
Bureau, assigned a special agent to conduct an undercover investigation into these allegations
of conspiracy and local officials wanting James dead. The probe, which was named the Wren Report
after the agent who conducted it, wrapped up in December 1928. It contained transcripts of
witness interviews from people closely associated with the prime suspects in the case. Those
interviews revealed that on the day James was shot, Lawrence and Roy Wilson had stolen 20 gallons of
whiskey and hidden it on West Mountain around four o'clock in the afternoon. One witness, the woman who'd initially reported hearing a gunshot ring out between 4 and 5 o'clock,
told investigators that she saw the suspects come down the mountain around 6.30.
Raymond Hunt had a Winchester rifle in his hands,
and she heard him tell Doc Weldon that he'd nearly missed James the first time.
Then Doc replied it didn't matter because'd nearly missed James the first time. Then Doc replied, it didn't matter
because they got him good the second time. This woman witnessed the men hide the rifle under the
Weldon's barn. She also said that they threatened her life if she told anyone what she'd seen or
heard. After the Wren report wrapped up, the U.S. Attorney General filed a criminal complaint
against all five suspects
for conspiring to murder a government witness in the process of performing his duties. Arrest
warrants were issued for all of the men, but by that time, most of them had split town. Thankfully,
authorities were able to track all of them down, and by January 1929, they were arraigned in court.
of them down, and by January 1929, they were arraigned in court. According to Max Bryan's reporting, on February 1st, 1929, Raymond Hunt, David Camp, Walter Weldon, Roy Wilson, and Lawrence
Wilson were indicted for first-degree murder in Garland County. Raymond's trial was scheduled to
start on February 25th, 1929, nearly two years after James' murder.
Political jockeying between the state of Arkansas courts and the federal government is what delayed the trials for so long.
The feds had clearly stated back in 1927 that West Mountain was not federal jurisdiction.
They denied the park superintendent's request for federal resources.
jurisdiction. They denied the park superintendent's request for federal resources. However, by the time the trials came around and federal prosecutors saw a potential high-profile murder conviction
could be theirs, they began squabbling with the Attorney General of Arkansas to have Raymond
tried in federal court. Ultimately, the two sides came to an agreement to first prosecute Raymond and the other defendants for murder locally in Garland County.
Then they would go to trial on conspiracy charges in federal court.
Raymond's defense at his murder trial was that he was working for a family member's business at the time of the murder, and these relatives could vouch for him.
Raymond even testified that there was no bad blood between him and Ranger
James Carey. He stated to jurors that it was quite the opposite. He and James were the best of
friends. One of Raymond's uncles took the witness stand and testified that at one point in time,
he'd even heard Raymond and James laughing together outside of his shop. Now, this testimony was a slap in the face to
James's widow, Thelma, and the entire Carey family. Many people in the courtroom were appalled to hear
Raymond's testimony. Another severe blow to the prosecution at trial was the fact that most of
their witnesses were criminals too, gamblers or sex workers who had decided to testify against Raymond.
The defense destroyed these people's testimony and successfully showed the jurors that they
were not credible witnesses. After roughly four hours of deliberation, the jury returned
and they acquitted Raymond. Prosecutors, fearing the other four defendants' trials would go the same way,
decided to drop all of the charges. News reports are a little murky, but sometime between February
and April of 1929, Raymond was moved out of state custody and faced the federal charges for
conspiracy. He was convicted after taking a no-contest plea. A judge sentenced him to one year in a federal penitentiary.
Then he was released.
The government dismissed all of the charges against the other defendants
due to people coming forward and providing them alibis
and the fact that the state courts had dismissed murder charges earlier that year.
No criminal charges or indictments were ever brought against the
Hot Springs Police Chief or National Park Superintendent Joseph Bolton.
In May 2016, the National Park Service erected a memorial inside of Hot Springs National Park
to honor James Carey. The bronze plaque monument is fixed to a boulder facing toward West Mountain. It features the
iconic Park Ranger campaign hat. James Carey's son, who in 2016 was 94 years old, told news
reporters that after his father's death, the family faced very hard times financially and
emotionally. The National Park Service superintendent delayed paperwork that required the government pay in full for his father's funeral.
James Orvis supported the notion that a larger government conspiracy was to blame for his father's murder.
He and his family found their peace about the tragedy over the years and forever will be proud of James Carey's sacrifice.
be proud of James Carey's sacrifice. As for the identity of the true trigger man behind whatever gun killed the ranger, no one to this day truly knows. It's a secret forever kept by Hot Springs
National Park. Park Predators is an AudioChuck original podcast.
Research and writing by Delia D'Ambra,
with writing assistance from executive producer
Ashley Flowers. Sound design by David Flowers. You can find all of the source material for this
episode on our website, parkpredators.com. So what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?