Park Predators - The Hunters
Episode Date: May 6, 2025When two hunters are murdered within days of one another in nearby popular Florida hunting grounds, law enforcement realizes they may be dealing with a serial killer. Their journey to catch the elusiv...e killer spans years and multiple U.S. states.View source material and photos for this episode at: parkpredators.com/the-hunters Park Predators is an audiochuck production. Connect with us on social media:Instagram: @parkpredators | @audiochuckTwitter: @ParkPredators | @audiochuckFacebook: /ParkPredators | /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck
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Hi, park enthusiasts.
I'm your host, Delia D'Ambra.
And the case I'm going to tell you about today is one that is just downright chilling.
Everything about it will give you full-body chills because it involves two victims that
seem like they should have been the least likely people to have been targeted.
They were hunters, armed veteran outdoorsmen whose killer, in my opinion, took a huge risk
attacking them, but somehow
succeeded.
The crimes unfolded in two different recreation spaces, Osceola National Forest and Camp Blanding
Wildlife Management Area, which are both in Florida.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's website, Osceola National Forest is somewhere
people visit to disconnect with their normal lives and take solace in nature.
It's known for having an abundance of trails and great areas to fish, camp, swim, and hunt.
It's located in northern Florida, about a 45-minute drive west of Jacksonville.
It actually butts right up to the Georgia border.
The camp-blanding wildlife management area sits about an hour southeast of Osceola National Forest,
and it's located basically right between the cities of Jacksonville and Gainesville.
It encompasses more than 56,000 acres, some of which is closed to visitors and hunters during the year
because the Florida Department of Military Affairs operates on it.
When portions of Camp Blanding are open, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission monitors its use for fishing, hiking, hunting, and other recreational activities.
FWC has strict guidelines that hunters must follow if they want to catch game there.
But in November 1993, a sportsman entered camp-blanding in Osceola National Forest with no intention of following the rules or upholding
the law.
What resulted from his actions sent law enforcement investigators on a years-long hunt of their
own that ultimately revealed a ruthless human predator who preferred hunting hunters.
This is Park Predators. is park predators. On Friday night, November 19, 1993, a man named Joe Hill arrived at the Cobb Campgrounds
in Osceola National Forest to meet up with his dad, 63-year-old Don Hill.
Just prior to this, Don had gone ahead of his son and set up a small camper trailer
at the campground and spent that Friday hunting in the forest.
When Joe arrived, though, he discovered that his father's trailer was locked,
which felt odd to him,
because he fully expected his dad to be inside
and settling in for the day.
The only rational explanation Joe could come up with
as to where Don might be was that maybe his dad
had taken a quick trip to get supplies
or something in nearby Lake City,
which was only like 15 miles away.
Because Joe hadn't seen Don's 1989 Maroon and Silver Chevy pickup parked near the camper trailer
when he'd arrived, that indicated to him that Don had probably just left the area for a little bit.
Figuring his dad would be back soon, Joe decided to stay put and wait for Don to return.
But when one hour went by and then two, that's when Joe realized something wasn't right.
So he used a payphone at the campground to call his mom at his parents' house in Orange
Park, Florida.
But she told Joe that she hadn't heard from Don since much earlier in the day.
I imagine not wanting to send his mom into a panic or anything, Joe downplayed the situation
as a big misunderstanding and told her not to be too concerned.
However, deep down, he was definitely worried by that point.
Joe spent the night of the 19th
either there at his dad's vacant campsite
or at his own home.
It's hard to tell from the source material.
But whatever it was,
by the time the sun rose the following morning,
Saturday, November 20th,
he was determined to figure out
what was going on with his dad.
So he decided to drive around Osceola National Forest and look in a few places that he knew his dad liked to hunt in.
He searched high and low for any sign of his father's Chevy pickup and even drove on overpasses along Interstate 10,
which cuts right through the National Forest.
He also drove several main roads and forest roads until
finally he spotted the vehicle. It was parked on the side of what I think was a more rural
side road called Dobson Grade Road, but when Joe looked inside of the Chevy, Don wasn't
there. Unsure where his father could be, Joe yelled out Don's name several times, hoping
that he would respond. As Joe hollered, he began walking down what's known as a fire break, which is a man-made
path in the forest that has been cleared of vegetation in order to stop a wildfire from
spreading if one comes along.
And as Joe got further and further down this fire break, he saw what he recognized as a
tree stand, which essentially was a ladder going up a big pine tree.
And once he was right in front of it,
he saw his father's body lying on the ground.
Don's fairly new 30-30 caliber Winchester rifle
was still slung around his right arm
and laying across his body,
which was lying on its right side.
Joe immediately saw that his dad
had sustained a lot of trauma to his head,
and the sight was so disturbing
that he quickly retreated
from the area and jogged back to where he'd parked
his own car to get help.
Not long after Joe made this discovery,
the Baker County Sheriff's Office became aware
of the situation and sent deputy sheriffs to the scene.
The Florida Department of Highway Patrol also dispatched
some of its troopers to assist in the investigation.
Shortly after law enforcement arrived, Don's body in the tree stand it was at the
base of was cordoned off and one of the first homicide investigators to arrive
was a lieutenant from the sheriff's office named Charlie Sharman.
Charlie had been off duty when he got the call about a hunter who died of an
apparent gunshot wound.
And actually, when he arrived, Charlie was wearing casual clothes, a sweatshirt, boots,
and blue jeans.
But despite his informal attire, he jumped right into detective mode.
After observing Don's body and the environment around the tree stand, Charlie concluded that
the 63-year-old had most likely not died as a result of a hunting accident.
For one thing, Don had been shot at least twice at close range,
once in the head and once in his back. The ammunition that had been used appeared to have
come from a shotgun, not a Winchester rifle like the one Don was carrying. Another clue authorities
noted was that it seemed as if Don had been assaulted from behind while already in the
tree stand or possibly when he was climbing out.
There were also a few indications that someone had tried to clean up the crime scene.
What exactly those clues were though, I couldn't find specifically stated in the available source material.
An article by Jim Redman for Outdoor Life magazine and an episode of cold case files called the hunter homicides, later reported that Don's belt had been cut,
and a hunting knife in a sheath that he was known to keep on him was gone, as well as his wallet.
Investigators suspected that both items had presumably been stolen by whoever had attacked
him. The totality of the crime scene as a whole caused investigators to suspect that Don had not
done this to himself. I mean, the fact that he'd been shot twice with ammunition suspected to have come from a firearm
that didn't belong to the gun he was hunting with was a strong indicator that he'd not died by
suicide or some kind of bizarre hunting accident. That just seemed physically impossible. Plus,
when he was found, he was wearing his bright orange hunting vest, another obvious sign that
it would have been very unusual for a fellow hunter to mistake him for an
animal or something.
The Tampa Bay Times, formerly the St. Petersburg Times, reported that at some point in the
investigation, authorities received a tip about a blue van that had been spotted in
the general area where Don was found.
But it seems like the details about who was driving that vehicle or what
direction it left in were minimal.
Over the next few days, as news of Don's death got out, other hunters who
frequented Osceola National Forest and other recreation spaces were a bit
spooked, to say the least.
Don was a retired Navy chief petty officer originally from San Diego,
California, who by all accounts was very familiar
with the landscape he'd gone hunting in.
At the time of his death,
he lived in Orange Park, Florida with his wife,
which is about an hour southeast of where he'd gone hunting.
So I imagine it was really alarming
to other outdoors enthusiasts
to see such a seasoned local hunter get gunned down
in what appeared to be cold blood.
And their fears would only ratchet up that much more when yet another hunter from Orange
Park turned up dead, mere days after Don Hill's death, a woman named Mary Marzola, who was
some 50 miles away in Clay County, Florida, spoke with her boyfriend, 35-year-old Greg
Wood, about what his plans were for the day.
Greg and Mary lived together along with their daughter in Orange Park, and while normally
Greg would have been working his shift at a business in nearby Jacksonville called Sun Golf, teaching golf
lessons or making sales, he happened to have November 24th off. So he told Mary that he
was thinking of going duck hunting in St. Augustine, Florida, but he wasn't sure yet.
He remarked that if he did end up doing that, he'd be sure to leave her a note at their
place indicating that's what he decided to do.
But when Mary got home from work that evening, she didn't find Greg or any message from him.
She checked a closet in their house and discovered his.308 rifle was still inside, which indicated
to her that he hadn't ended up going duck hunting after all.
It wasn't until a little while later when Mary talked with her mom Ginger that she learned
Greg had spoken with Ginger around 3.30 p.m. that day and arranged for Mary's daughter
to go to Ginger's house after school while he went out for a while.
During his conversation with Ginger, though, Greg had failed to specify where exactly he
was going or what he was planning to do on his day off.
So Mary was just left with a lot of unanswered questions as the night got
later and later and she still had not heard from Greg. Her concern grew stronger as more time went
by so with few options to turn to she called Greg's loved ones and friends to see if any of them knew
where he was but no one did. To figure out if he traveled to Camp Blanding, Mary phoned the
management area's office and told an FWC employee what Greg looked like and the type of car he drove, which was a Gray Mazda.
The next day, November 25th, which also happened to be Thanksgiving Day, Greg's father Don
Wood and one of his brothers Vigo thought it would be worth a shot to look for him at
Camp Blanding Wildlife Management Area because they knew it was one of his preferred hunting
spots.
The article by Jim Redman for Outdoor Life Magazine states that in addition to the.308
rifle Gregg had left at his home, he also owned a 12-gauge Remington shotgun as well
as a.357 Smith & Wesson handgun.
Apparently Mary had not checked to see that those two firearms were missing when she'd
gone through their house the first time.
When Vigo and Don went out to the wildlife management area to start looking for
Greg, it seemingly didn't take them long before they found his car parked on the
side of a paved road near a hunting blind that was one of his favorites.
The episode of cold case files I mentioned earlier stated that the Mazda was near a
body of water called Kingsley Lake.
But despite searching high and low in that area for Greg, his brother and father didn't
find him.
So Don left Vigo by the Mazda and drove to Camp Landing's check-in station to report
that they'd found the car, but not Greg.
The employee working at the check-in station gave that information to an FWC officer named
Steve Chance, who then joined Don and headed back to meet up with Vigo.
Steve was a great addition to the search effort because he had more than 20 years of experience
tracking and finding people in the woods, especially lost hunters.
During his and Don's ride to meet up with Vigo, Steve asked the nearby Jacksonville
Sheriff's Office to send its helicopter to help in the search.
But before that aircraft even got off the ground, Steve canceled the flight, because
when he and Don made it back to Vigo, they learned that Vigo had already found Greg's
body.
Turns out, in the time Don had been gone, Vigo had continued to look for his missing
brother and eventually found him lying on the ground next to a fallen tree.
He was positioned on a path just a few hundred yards away from the hunting blind that Don and Vigo had previously checked.
I think that was the same one that seemingly was Greg's favorite.
Anyway, it was obvious from looking at his body that he'd been shot
execution style in the back of his head at close range with a shotgun.
And he'd been dead for some time.
Right away, FWC officer Steve Chance noticed several things at the scene that
looked suspicious to him.
One, Greg's wallet was nowhere to be found and it was obvious that his belt
had been cut.
Two, the Remington shotgun that he was believed to have been carrying was also
missing, as well as the Smith and Wesson handgun and holster he usually kept on
him while hunting.
He was also wearing a bright orange hunting vest, making it seemingly impossible
for him to be mistaken in the woods for anything other than a hunter.
A Clay County Sheriff's Office homicide detective who responded to Greg's death
investigation shortly after his body was discovered was a guy named Jim Redmond.
Jim authored the Outdoor Life magazine article on this case that I mentioned a little bit earlier, which was a crucial piece Jim Redmond. Jim authored the Outdoor Life magazine article on this case
that I mentioned a little bit earlier, which was a crucial piece of source material.
Jim was informed by Officer Steve Chance that the circumstances surrounding Greg's death felt
eerily similar to Don Hill's death. It also wasn't lost on him that Don had been slain just a few
days prior in a similar type of recreation space. And some of his personal belongings, just like Greg's, were missing.
To help Jim and his team process the crime scene, the Florida
Department of Law Enforcement provided crime scene text to collect
evidence and take pictures.
Blood spatter on the plants and ground around Greg's body, as well
as his positioning, caused Jim Redmond to suspect that Greg most
likely had been kneeling down,
possibly praying when his killer shot him from behind.
Unfortunately though, there wasn't much else in terms of physical evidence at the crime scene.
No shell casings left behind, no hairs, no fingerprints, and no fibers.
One of the first phone calls Detective Redmond made after leaving the crime scene was to officials in Baker County who were investigating Don Hill's murder.
That agency also had very little physical evidence to work with, but the two agencies
almost immediately joined forces because investigators strongly suspected the same perpetrator or
perpetrators could be responsible for both crimes.
On December 8th, Baker County and Clay County Sheriff's
offices, along with employees from FWC,
the US Forestry Service, now known as the US Forest Service,
FTLE and the Camp Blanding Military Police
formed a task force that they named Task Force Orion.
The name was derived from the Constellation Orion,
which if you're unfamiliar, is known as the Hunter.
Around that same time, authorities also set up a tip hotline and offered a $20,000 reward
for information.
They even made sure to submit details about Greg Wood's two missing firearms into the
National Crime Information Center database, also known as NCIC.
You know, in the event that the stolen guns ever popped up in a transaction or crime scene somewhere else in the country.
There were no hits right after they first submitted the two guns' data,
but law enforcement remained hopeful that lead would eventually go somewhere.
In the meantime, news publications across the country picked up the story,
and I think that's when the reality that someone or a group of people were potentially hunting hunters in Florida really set in for outdoor enthusiasts.
It was downright scary.
One murder was one thing, but two was super unusual.
A guy who owned a hunting business in Orange Park where both victims were from told the
Tampa Bay Times, formerly the St. Petersburg Times, quote,
somebody is stalking people.
You're going to have to become wary of strangers.
I think this is a crazy person doing this.
I've never heard of anybody getting robbed in the woods before, end quote.
What the two murders communicated to outdoor enthusiasts was that whoever was
responsible for the crimes was brave enough to walk up to a person who was armed and attack them.
That fact alone indicated that the perpetrator or perpetrators were extremely brazen.
It certainly seems unusual to me that someone would choose to target a victim who very easily
could have returned fire or somehow injured them during the attack.
And yet that was looking more and more like the type of person or people that law enforcement
was dealing with.
Other hunters from Florida told the New York Times that because of what had happened to
Greg and Don, they planned to go hunting in pairs instead of by themselves, you know,
as a means of extra protection.
When the victims were killed in late November 1993, there were several weeks still left
in the deer hunting season.
Authorities cautioned hunters to be careful in the woods because investigators were genuinely
concerned that whoever the killer or killers were, they could and likely would kill again.
Clay County homicide detective Jim Redman used this to his advantage.
Early on in the investigation, he came up with a plan to try and lure the suspect or suspects out.
He dressed in hunting attire, grew a beard, and went into Camp Blanding Wildlife Management Area
where investigators suspected the killer or killers might be. He perched himself under the very tree
where Greg Wood had been murdered and waited. He was essentially using himself as human bait,
but don't worry, he wasn't totally alone.
FWC officer Steve Chance was fairly close by and armed with a scoped rifle just in case
things went sideways.
But hours and hours went by and nothing happened.
The undercover sting operation was a bust and investigators were no closer to identifying
who was responsible for the murders.
Six months went by and and then a year,
and not a whole lot of progress was made in either case.
After year one, Task Force Orion disbanded,
and almost two years later in 1995,
concerns were still high in the hunting community
that someone had gotten away with two brutal murders.
In those two years or so,
Greg's loved ones erected a memorial plaque for him
at the entrance of Camp Blanding Wildlife Management Area.
It stated, quote,
"'In loving memory of Greg Wood,
"'may all who pass here go with peace
"'in harmony with nature and all mankind.'
"'11-24-93.'
End quote.
Jim Redman wrote in his article for Outdoor Life magazine that within six months of the
murder, the reward for information was increased to more than $45,000.
And he chased down a handful of potential leads in other U.S. states, including similar
kinds of crimes, but nothing panned out.
It was frustrating, and investigators began to wonder if perhaps robbery wasn't the killer's
only motive.
Other than the two victims' wallets and the firearms that had been stolen from Greg and
the knife that was taken from Don, there wasn't much else of value for the killer to make
off with.
And typically hunters were not known to carry much cash in their wallets while out in the
woods.
So, theoretically, whoever robbed the victims
likely didn't get away with much, which was just another detail that didn't quite make sense to
authorities. In the summer of 1996, Jim Redman turned to the media for help. He agreed to
participate in the pilot season of Cold Case Files, which I think at that time was a CBS program just called Cold Case.
The segment aired the following year in April 1997,
and right away Jim started receiving
a bunch of new leads and information.
At that point, it had been almost four years
since Don and Greg's murders,
and investigators really needed to catch a break.
In August of that year, that's exactly what happened.
One of Greg Wood's long-lost stolen guns turned up.
On August 6, 1997, nearly four years after Don and Greg were murdered,
a records clerk for Putnam County Sheriff's Office in Florida sat down to enter a pawnshop ticket into her computer database that kept track of firearms and their serial numbers.
This clerk would then cross-reference guns she entered against lists of missing or stolen firearms in the NCIC database. She was surprised to discover that the gun from the pawn shop ticket got flagged
as a 357 Smith and Wesson that had been reported stolen
out of Clay County some four years earlier.
When she looked to see where it had been pawned,
she read that it had been involved in a transaction
at a store called Super Pawn in Palatka, Florida.
And just to give you some geographical context,
Palatka is a little less than an hour southeast
of Camp Blanding Wildlife Management area where Greg Wood was killed.
So not very far away from his crime scene at all.
Within a short amount of time, Putnam County investigators got in touch with Clay County
Sheriff's Office and together, Detective Jim Redman and a Putnam County detective traveled
to the super pond in Palatka to interview the owner.
The pond shop owner revealed that a woman had sold him the gun,
and in exchange he'd given her about $75 in cash.
Thankfully, the owner still had the firearm in his store,
and Jim Redman was able to seize it as evidence.
From there, he and the Putnam County detective worked to trace how many hands the gun had passed
through since November 1993.
They started with the woman who'd pawned it at Super Pawn and she revealed she'd gotten it from her boyfriend.
That guy told authorities he'd purchased it from a 14 year old who eventually confessed that he'd stolen it from a truck in Hastings, Florida.
What's really cool is that Jim Redman and his team were able to trace the gun through 14 different people before eventually
identifying the folks who owned the truck it was reported stolen from.
Those people were a set of brothers named Michael and Paul Tyler.
Now, Michael and Paul were kind of interesting guys because they
were both avid hunters and kind of fit the general suspect
profile for the person law enforcement suspected killed Don and Greg.
Paul and Michael were both outdoorsmen, white, in their 30s to 40s, and of course had been in possession of Greg Wood's stolen handgun.
However, upon closer examination, Jim Redmond learned that Michael and Paul both had solid alibis.
For example, on the day Greg was killed, they were working together for a tractor dealership
making a delivery in the town of Belle Glade, Florida,
nearly five hours south
of Camp Blanding Wildlife Management Area.
The brothers were able to prove their alibis
from delivery paperwork they'd turned into their employer.
But even with the two of them off the board as suspects,
homicide investigators still needed to know
how they'd ended up with Greg Wood's stolen revolver.
When Jim Redman interviewed them,
he learned that Paul and Michael had received the gun
from one of their cousins, a guy named Jimmy Ray Beagle.
Now, what's super interesting about Jimmy Ray
is that authorities learned from Paul and Michael
that he'd also sold another family member a shotgun around the same time he sold them Greg Smith and Wesson.
And wouldn't you know it, the shotgun
Jimmy Ray was reported to have sold was a Remington, the same type that Greg Wood owned.
So with all of that information in mind,
investigator Redmond decided to really narrow in on Jimmy Ray as a suspect.
He learned that the 39 year old had made many attempts to work as a police officer,
but never quite made the cut.
So instead, Jimmy Ray had found employment as a security guard.
Investigators also learned that Jimmy Ray had a fixation with firearms and
was known to his family to be a bit odd.
His cousins, Paul and Michael Tyler, told authorities that on
the day Jimmy Ray had sold them the 357 Smith and Wesson, they'd curiously asked
Jimmy Ray where he'd gotten it from. But Jimmy Ray didn't really give them a
straight answer. All he said was that the guy it had belonged to wouldn't be
needing it anymore. And that was it. End of conversation. Now, I don't think at
that moment Paul and Michael thought anything was super sinister
about Jimmy Ray's vague remark, but in hindsight, they realized it was kind of strange.
Strange enough that the brothers began to wonder if Jimmy Ray might be hiding something.
So Paul decided to wear a wire and record his conversations with his cousin.
All the while, investigator Jim Redman was taping those interactions and listening in.
In one conversation, Paul told Jimmy Ray that he was upset because the FBI and police had
come to his workplace and asked about the origin of the Smith and Wesson revolver because
they believed it was involved in a murder.
Paul basically lamented that he was upset because now he and Michael were being investigated
for a murder they had nothing to do with.
The goal, of course, in all of this was to get Jimmy Ray
to speak up and say something to comfort Paul
or defend him, but Jimmy Ray never did.
Paul told producers for Cold Case Files
that Jimmy Ray was very cold when it came
to the woes Paul was pretending to face
and acted like he could care less that Paul and Michael might have a man's murder pinned on them.
Paul and Jimmy Ray continued to talk about the issue over the course of several conversations,
and at one point, Jimmy Ray told Paul that he knew exactly who Jim Redmond was,
and started advising his cousins on how to deal with law enforcement.
Jimmy Ray assured Paul that he would go speak with Redmond in person to clear up the whole thing. He eventually
did that on March 24th 1998, several months after coming on to investigators
radar as their prime suspect. Some of the source material states that law
enforcement had interviewed Jimmy Ray three times before that date though.
However, I'm not sure how long those interviews lasted or what all was
discussed in them, or if Jimmy Ray ever became aware that he was law
enforcement's prime suspect.
I should also mention too, that there was a short period of time in November and
December 1997, where investigators all the way in Ohio thought a murder
suspect they had in custody there was possibly involved in what happened to Greg and Don
But in the end that was not the case
The guy from Ohio was suspected of at least five murders two of whom were hunters and all of which had occurred between
1993 and 1997
The reason he came on Florida investigators radar at all was because he lived in Florida in November
1993 and become a convicted felon there for a drug offense on Florida investigators radar at all was because he lived in Florida in November 1993
and become a convicted felon there for a drug offense. My point though in mentioning him is
because if you look up news coverage on this case you'll see that even though Detective Jim
Redman was solidly pursuing Jimmy Ray Beagle as a prime suspect by the end of 1997, he was also
still considering potential leads in other states, you know, just doing his
due diligence, I guess.
Anyway, on March 24, 1998, it was clear that Jimmy Ray was the main person Florida authorities
were looking at for the unsolved hunter homicides.
And in order to try and get him to confess, investigator Redman came up with a unique
plan to confront Jimmy Ray inside a Clay County Sheriff's Office
substation when he arrived for his formal interview. During his research about Jimmy
Ray, Investigator Redmond had learned that Jimmy Ray claimed to have recently become a new Christian.
So Redmond wanted to set up the interrogation space to sort of tap into Jimmy Ray's faith.
You know, things like heaven and hell, right and wrong, salvation and condemnation,
that sort of thing. Redmond dressed himself in a black sports coat with a white collar
underneath, which kind of gave him the appearance of a member of the clergy. On one side of
the interview room, he set out all of the crime scene photos of Don and Greg, as well
as some evidence and the pawn shop ticket for the Smith and Wesson.
On the other side of the space, he set up an open Bible.
Softly playing from speakers in the room were the recorded wiretaps that investigators had
captured between Paul and Jimmy Ray throughout the course of their investigation.
Basically, Detective Redman was subtly going to imply to Jimmy Ray that he could either
choose to tell the truth and come clean,
or he could not cooperate and face judgment.
When Jimmy Ray arrived around 1230 p.m. on the 24th, he was reported to be very surprised
and confused by the interrogation set up.
But over the course of the next 45 minutes to an hour, he revealed incriminating details
about Don Hill's murder in Osceola National Forest.
And he said he'd stumbled across Greg Wood's body at Camp Blanding a few days afterwards.
Before continuing to talk, though, Jimmy Ray asked for a bathroom break and was directed to the restroom in the sheriff's office.
But several minutes went by and eventually Detective Redmond realized Jimmy Ray had not returned to the interview room.
Redmond then knocked on the bathroom door several times, but Jimmy Ray refused to exit.
This went on for a little while,
but after four more failed attempts to get Jimmy Ray to cooperate,
Detective Redmond kicked in the door to the restroom and crashed down onto the
floor. When he looked over,
he found himself staring at Jimmy Ray who was crouched in a fighting position
and pointing the barrel of a gun right in his face.
Jimmy Ray threatened to kill Detective Redmond
if he didn't leave the room immediately.
Turns out when Jimmy Ray had first arrived
at the substation,
deputies didn't think to pat him down for weapons.
They knew that as a security guard,
he had a valid license to carry a concealed firearm,
but they assumed that since he'd come in willingly,
he wasn't armed, which turned out to be a big mistake
on their part.
But anyway, after Detective Redman got to safety
and strapped himself with a protective vest,
the sheriff's office and its SWAT team
went into full-blown hostage negotiation mode.
This lasted for nine hours, and during all that time,
Jimmy Ray passed several messages to Detective Redmond
underneath the bathroom door that detailed more about
the circumstances surrounding Greg and Dawn's murders,
including how he'd cut both of their belts in the back,
a detail that had not been previously known to the public.
During the standoff, Jimmy Ray also scribbled notes
and drawings on surfaces inside the bathroom.
It was in those writings that he ended up confessing
to even more crimes, including the arson of his own home
for insurance money and other offenses.
At various times, he broke out in singing religious songs
and could be heard throughout the sheriff's office building.
All of this seemingly bizarre behavior led investigators to grow concern that Jimmy Ray
might be intending to die by suicide.
So before midnight on the 24th, the Sheriff's Office's SWAT team devised a plan to pump
chemical gas into the restroom where Jimmy Ray was to try and force him out, I guess
before he could do something drastic.
But after like 10 minutes of that, Jimmy Ray realized what authorities were doing,
and he opened fire on the SWAT team through the roof and door of the bathroom.
The source material doesn't mention any deputies being hit or injured, but what is clear
is that Jimmy Ray eventually took his own life with his firearm.
In the aftermath of the shootout, it was clear to investigators that they'd caught Greg and Don's murderer.
I mean, the sheriff's office even said that much to the press.
But unfortunately, they weren't able to bring Jimmy Ray to justice,
at least not in the way they'd hoped.
To this day, some might argue that the true motive behind why Jimmy Ray did what
he did is still a bit of a mystery. A lot of folks, including Detective Jim Redmond, believe it was as simple as greed.
Jimmy Ray wanted what Don and Greg had that was valuable, so he took it by force.
An article by the Associated Press stated that at the time of the killings,
Jimmy Ray said he was desperate for money after having some of his stuff repossessed
and losing his business and home.
In his communications with investigators during his final hours,
he indicated there was no reason why he'd specifically targeted Greg Wood and Don Hill.
Which, if true, means they were just in the wrong place at the wrong time.
What's super tragic is that it was reported Jimmy Ray likely only got $20 in cash from both of his victims' wallets,
plus $75 for selling Greg's handgun.
So in total, less than a hundred bucks.
It's heartbreaking to think that was his reason for taking two lives,
for gunning down in cold blood two men who had families and people who loved them.
I think this is a reminder for all of us, especially those of you listening who are
into hunting, to be vigilant.
In no way are Greg Wood and Dawn Hill to blame for what happened to them.
They are both innocent victims in this case.
But it's important to remember just because someone may approach you and be dressed like
you or appear to share the same hobbies as you, you can't let your guard down.
Because sometimes, predators are much closer than you may think.
Park Predators is an audio-checked production.
You can view a list of all the source material for this episode on our website, ParkPredators.com.
And you can also follow ParkPredators on Instagram, at ParkPredators.
So what do you think Chuck, do you approve?