Park Predators - The Roadblock
Episode Date: May 31, 2022On New Year's Day in 2012 park ranger Margaret Anderson encountered a violent man on an icy roadway in Mount Rainier National Park. The aftermath of their confrontation led authorities on a park-wide ...manhunt that sent questions flying as to how a predator carrying so much firepower made it through the gates.Sources for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit parkpredators.com  Park Predators is an audiochuck production. Connect with us on social media:Instagram: @audiochuckTwitter: @audiochuckFacebook: /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck
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Hi, park enthusiasts.
Welcome back to Park Predators Season 3.
I'm your host, Delia D'Ambra.
The case I'm going to tell you about today happened not that long ago, in January 2012,
which technically was a decade ago, but for so many people who are a part of this story,
they remember it like it was yesterday.
It takes place in Mount Rainier National Park in Washington. And the first thing you need to
know about Mount Rainier is that it is spectacularly beautiful and at the same time, an eruption
waiting to happen. Seriously, Mount Rainier is an active volcano, according to the National Park
Service. It might be icy and covered with snow a lot of the time,
but it is still considered a volcanic feature. At more than 14,000 feet above sea level,
the glaciated peak is surrounded by five major rivers and what are known as subalpine meadows
full of wildflowers. The weather patterns in the park are predominantly dictated by the Pacific
Ocean, and for the most part, the climate is cool and rainy. Every now and then, though, in the summer, the temperatures
get up to the 60s or 70s on a good day. A big piece of advice that rangers tell all visitors
is to pay attention to weather forecasts. The weather can change drastically in the park at
any time from November through May. It's pretty much a guarantee that you'll run into road closures
or treacherous areas that no one can survive crossing. On New Year's Day in 2012, a female
park ranger named Margaret Anderson found herself face-to-face with an unanticipated scenario on a
roadway in the park, the result of which was the end of her life and a lengthy investigation to determine if the National
Park Service could have prevented her death. This is Park Predators. In the early morning hours of January 1, 2012,
911 dispatchers in King County, Washington received an alarming call around 3 a.m.
The person on the other end of the line was panicked and shouting that they'd witnessed a violent shooting in the 6200 block of South 117th Place in southeast Seattle.
The caller claimed that three men and a woman were in a house at that address and needed
medical attention right away.
King County deputies rushed to the scene and sure enough, they found four people, three
men and a woman, bleeding extensively from gunshot wounds.
Ambulances rushed the victims to Harborview Medical Center,
but things were not looking good.
When deputies interviewed witnesses in the area and the 911 caller,
they learned that a New Year's Eve house party
had been in full swing inside the home when the shooting took place.
According to KOMO News, people who attended told investigators
that around midnight,
several people had shown up armed with guns
and had a quote,
show and tell, end quote, with their guns.
By three o'clock, the partying had escalated
and an argument over a firearm broke out.
According to ABC News' reporting,
at least one guy was asked to leave,
but not long after, he returned,
and that's when shots had rung out. Before anyone knew what had happened, four people were laying
on the ground, bleeding from bullet wounds. Unfortunately, none of the witnesses who spoke
with police knew who had pulled the trigger, or if there were multiple shooters who'd fired.
And to make matters worse, authorities couldn't get any useful information from the four
victims because they were all in really bad shape. Two of them were reported as being in critical
condition, just barely clinging to life. What detectives did determine was that witnesses saw
at least three people fleeing the scene right after the shooting, including the man who'd been
asked to leave the party but then returned. So obviously those three folks that left were who authorities wanted to speak to right away.
Within an hour or so, deputies had tracked down two of those three people
and made contact with family members of the third.
That last person of interest's name was Benjamin Barnes,
but when officers asked his family where he was, they said they didn't know.
At the time, they were living in Southern California
and said Benjamin had been staying in Seattle for the last few years.
So that lead kind of died there.
Deputies would have to wait for more clarity with their current shooting investigation
because just as they were working to get some answers and more information about Benjamin,
another violent event erupted two hours away inside Mount Rainier
National Park. That incident prompted law enforcement in King County and other surrounding
counties to drop what they were doing and scramble to assist the National Park Service.
Around 10 a.m., a veteran volunteer park ranger named Bill Marsh was working inside the Longmire
Museum at Mount Rainier National Park when he caught a glimpse of a passing park ranger named Bill Marsh was working inside the Longmire Museum at Mount Rainier National Park
when he caught a glimpse of a passing park ranger. Inside the vehicle, he saw the face of 34-year-old
Margaret Anderson, an 11-year veteran of MPS who frequently slowed down to wave, honk her horn,
and smile at Bill as he geared up for a busy day of visitors at the Longmire Historic District.
After their brief non nonverbal exchange,
Bill watched Margaret drive her government-issued SUV up the mountain on Paradise Valley Road.
Bill knew Margaret was likely headed to check in at the Jackson Memorial Visitor Center,
about 11 miles up the mountain.
Roughly 35 minutes later, he heard a distress call come over his radio
that made him stop dead in his tracks.
A female voice on the other end shouted, He heard a distress call come over his radio that made him stop dead in his tracks.
A female voice on the other end shouted,
Ranger 741 down.
Those three words told Bill everything he needed to know.
Margaret Anderson's badge number was 1074.
Bill knew she was in danger and needed backup immediately.
Right away, Bill and other rangers in the park's radios went wild and communication started to get tangled. All they knew was that somewhere in the 11 miles
between Longmire Ranger Station and the main visitor center up the mountain, something had
happened to Margaret. The squawking chatter over their radios quickly cleared up though,
and Bill and dozens of other rangers on duty learned that minutes before
Margaret's distress call had come in, another ranger driving up the mountain had initiated a
routine traffic stop on a blue Pontiac sedan that had blown through a tire chain checkpoint.
Some source material says it was a Chevy Impala, but most material says a Pontiac sedan. Anyway,
the car blowing through the tire chain checkpoint was a
big deal, because in the winter, when weather conditions are at their worst, NPS requires
vehicles driving up the mountain be outfitted with snow chains on their tires to avoid accidents.
In the days leading up to January 1st, the weather had been icy and snowy in the park,
so when this mystery vehicle had failed to stop, the ranger that
spotted it had immediately gotten behind it to tail it. When that ranger's lights and sirens
had started up, the driver of the Pontiac totally ignored the attempted traffic stop
and led the officer on a slow but steady chase up the mountain. When they learned that information,
it was clear to Bill and everyone else what had happened. Margaret had
likely heard her fellow ranger's radio announcement that he was in pursuit of a car and she'd turned
around to set up a roadblock, a standard procedure for any law enforcement officer who knows a car
chase is headed in the direction of innocent civilians. Bill's heart sank because he knew
without a doubt that Margaret had been headed up the mountain just a few minutes earlier.
And just based on how well he knew her, he knew there was no way she would have just ignored the dispatch.
She would have taken every opportunity to prevent whoever was in the rogue fleeing car from coming in contact with droves of tourists at the visitor center.
And Bill's fears were right.
And Bill's fears were right.
According to a news release from the National Park Service,
Margaret Anderson had heard the commotion on the scanners about the car chase and radioed in that she would turn her SUV sideways on Paradise Road
to try and intercept the driver
and ensure whoever was behind the wheel
did not make it up the mountain to the Jackson Visitor Center.
That one decision proved to be fatal, though,
because within seconds of the rogue car's driver
coming in contact with Margaret,
he made an abrupt U-turn,
got out of his driver's side door
and opened fire on her with an AR-15 rifle.
The shooter's round hit Margaret at close range
while she was still sitting in her SUV.
According to NPS,
authorities believe that Margaret likely died
shortly after being shot.
A report from the agency states that she was able to reverse her Chevy Tahoe into a snowbank
and drive about 100 yards up the mountain while getting one last radio call out. In that call,
she stated she needed help and warned her co-workers that the man who'd shot her was armed
and had taken off on foot with a rifle,
extra ammunition, and a knife.
But after that, no one spoke with Margaret again, which indicated she bled out fast.
When she was shot, Margaret was armed with a service weapon,
but had been unable to reach it or fire it before being shot herself.
NPS's release on the incident stated that after shooting Margaret, the gunman fired
at other responding Rangers who were en route driving up the mountain, including the Ranger
who'd initiated the original traffic stop.
That officer took several rounds to his windshield, and a bullet even went through his seatbelt,
but miraculously, he was unharmed.
After sending a barrage of bullets towards other first responders, the gunman took off
further into the snowy tree line
and was presumed to be hightailing it into the wilderness.
The only glimpse anyone got of the man was that he was a younger-looking white guy
who had at least some belongings with him.
Minutes after the shooting call came in,
more than 200 park staff who were on duty,
as well as droves of officers from surrounding law enforcement agencies,
responded to the scene.
The main investigating entities that spearheaded getting to Margaret and launching a search
for the gunmen were the Pierce County Sheriff's Office, Washington State Patrol, and the FBI.
The problem they faced was that, somewhere hidden in the thick forest near the scene,
the shooter was still firing at law enforcement.
According to NPS's documents on this
incident, it was too dangerous for anyone to get close to Margaret's vehicle or her body. Meanwhile,
visitors and park staff were trapped several miles away at the Jackson Visitor Center. NPS staff
closed all entrances to the park and reported that in total there were 125 visitors and 17 park staff members housed under armed guard at
the Jackson Visitor Center, while other first responders further down the mountain tried to
assemble a manhunt for the gunmen. The first group of officers to attempt to get to Margaret came
from the Pierce County SWAT team, but within minutes of launching an initial push up the
mountain, they were batted back down by gunfire. For 90 minutes,
Margaret's fellow rangers and her husband Eric, who was also a park ranger but was working on
duty in another section of the park, had to watch from a distance as officer after officer attempted
to retrieve Margaret's body from her SUV, but every time they failed. Eventually, after what felt like hours,
but was actually about two hours,
SWAT team members were finally able to get to Margaret
and confirmed she was dead.
The Seattle Times reported that she died
from gunshot wounds to her head and torso
while still buckled into her seat.
She'd had no time to react to her attacker.
SWAT teams also examined the suspect's sedan
and found lots of rounds of rifle ammunition,
a ballistics vest,
and several other high-powered firearms.
Throughout Sunday night,
law enforcement agencies used aircraft
equipped with infrared ground scanning technology
to try and locate the shooter.
More than 100 officers
from neighboring county sheriff's offices
and police departments
joined in the effort to find Margaret's killer, but the task proved to be tough.
The particular area of Mount Rainier where this happened is vast,
and although at the time of the shooting the weather was unusually clear and sunny,
those conditions were not guaranteed to hold up,
and searching hundreds of square miles for one lone gunman was going to be difficult.
Not to mention dangerous.
Authorities had no idea how many weapons the guy had on him
or how much ammunition he had to be able to fight fire with fire.
But as soon as they could, law enforcement officers with tracking dogs
began to hike on foot following what they believed to be boot tracks in the snow
to try and get a better idea of where to begin searching for their suspect. The source material differs a little bit on
exactly how investigators determined who they thought the shooter was, but by Sunday afternoon,
the FBI and NPS announced that 24-year-old Benjamin Colton Barnes from Seattle was a strong
person of interest in the case,
and the person they believed was on the run. Like I said, the reporting on this isn't super
detailed, but I think what happened was that the King County Sheriff's Office that had been
investigating the quadruple shooting in South Seattle from New Year's Eve connected with
federal investigators and shared their information. I also read in an article by Outside Magazine
that when investigators ran the license plate and information for the suspect's blue sedan,
it came back to Benjamin Colton Barnes.
So whichever way it was, by Monday afternoon,
all of the different agencies had gotten on the same page
and realized that their main suspect in the house party shooting in South Seattle
was also the prime suspect in the murder of Margaret Anderson.
What was really not good was that he was still on the loose.
As authorities looked into Benjamin's life and background,
what they found was disturbing.
According to the News Tribune, Benjamin Barnes was an Iraq war veteran who'd served a tour
overseas in the Middle East and came from a military family. The Seattle Times reported
that Benjamin had struggled socially and academically in high school and been in and
out of courses for troubled students who faced repeated expulsion. After getting his GED,
students who faced repeated expulsion. After getting his GED, he enlisted in the United States Army in 2007, but only served two years and seven months before being dishonorably discharged in 2009.
According to a spokesman for the Army who interviewed with the Seattle Times,
Benjamin had displayed one too many bouts of threatening behavior while enlisted,
some of which may have stemmed from the loss of a close Army friend
who'd chosen to take his own life in 2011.
The ultimate reason for Benjamin's dismissal
from the Army, though,
was because he'd been arrested
for driving under the influence
and illegally transporting a private weapon
while off base.
After being discharged,
Benjamin's friends and family,
who lived in Riverside County in Southern California,
said he became increasingly obsessed with guns and the idea of survivalism.
When law enforcement investigators searched his social media accounts,
they located disturbing images of Benjamin posing with automatic and semi-automatic weapons.
The captions of these photos intimated threatening language and behaviors.
Benjamin had also spent a lot of time camping and fishing in and around Mount Rainier National Park.
Sometimes he'd go by himself, and other times he'd take his young daughter.
When authorities tracked down and spoke with his former girlfriend, who was also the mother of his child,
they learned that Benjamin had a history of domestic violence and substance use issues.
The girlfriend told police that throughout their relationship,
Benjamin had claimed to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder,
a condition he said he'd been diagnosed with after serving overseas.
According to court records, in July of 2011,
roughly six months before the deadly shooting in the National Park,
Benjamin's former girlfriend had sought a temporary restraining order against
him. In an affidavit included in that filing, she described Benjamin as someone who would become
irritated easily, get angry without provocation, and displayed telltale signs of depression.
She said that on more than one occasion during their relationship, he'd verbalize thoughts of
self-harm. These behaviors eventually led them to split up,
but before they parted ways for good,
she'd notice him storing large quantities of firearms
and ammunition in their home.
The Seattle Times reported that as 2011 came to a close,
Benjamin's conversations with friends
grew more and more dark.
He told one friend he felt like he had no friends,
no money, and the world was against him.
And to some extent, Benjamin was right.
Reports show that by New Year's Eve of 2011,
he'd lost his job, he'd lost his relationship,
he was only allowed to see his daughter
during supervised visits
and had been kicked out of his apartment
and was sleeping in his car at casinos.
The 24-year-old was not headed in a good direction.
With all of that information in mind,
authorities issued an all-points bulletin about Benjamin that warned anyone who came in contact
with him should not approach him and consider him armed and dangerous. They specifically wanted
people camping or hiking in the backcountry of Mount Rainier near an area known as Reflection
Lakes to be cautious. Reflection Lakes was sort of smack dab in the middle of the area of the park
where authorities were tracking, or at least trying to track, Benjamin.
From 1 a.m. until around 4 a.m. early Monday morning,
authorities used several armored vehicles to evacuate civilians and staff
from the Jackson Visitor Center and get them out of the park.
Investigators felt that Benjamin posed too much of a threat
to let innocent people and police officers be out in the open
as these covert escorts were underway.
They figured that unless Benjamin had night vision,
it would be impossible for him to see the evacuees in the cover of darkness.
When sunrise came on Monday morning,
the National Park Service held a press conference
and announced
that they believed Benjamin had come up to Mount Rainier to flee from whatever crimes
he may have committed in Seattle.
They speculated that he'd likely just thrown stuff into his car and taken off to hide out
in the wilderness of the park, an area he was familiar with and could survive in.
They knew he'd had brief contact with his family in between fleeing the house party in Seattle around 3 a.m.
and entering the park on Sunday morning.
Pretty much from the moment police started looking for him,
they realized that Benjamin was not a typical fugitive
who was just gonna come in willingly
or without some kind of a standoff.
According to an article in the Oregonian,
he had extensive survival skills,
likely from his time serving in the military, and he utilized tactics to avoid law enforcement as they tracked him in the park.
A spokesman for the Pierce County Sheriff's Office named Ed Troyer told the newspaper, quote,
His tracks went into creeks and other waterways. He's intentionally trying to get out of the snow, end quote.
National Park Service rangers knew Benjamin's skills were going to be a challenge, but they
were confident he'd make a mistake.
In fact, in their eyes, he already had.
You see, according to a press conference held by the NPS, rangers said that the area of
the park they believed Benjamin was hiding out in was blocked on the north side by Mount
Rainier itself.
On the south side was a range of horseshoe-shaped mountains
that were nearly impossible to cross on foot.
To the east was about 10 miles of rugged wilderness and a canyon,
and to the west, he'd be heading back in the direction of law enforcement.
So, essentially, he was trapped.
Something else that would probably slow him down were the temperatures in the park.
They were reported to have plunged into the upper 20s overnight on Sunday.
Law enforcement hoped those freezing conditions would flush Benjamin out
or at least cause him to stay in one place long enough for SWAT team members to catch up to him.
NPS investigators felt confident that unless Benjamin had the ability and supplies
to realistically traverse 6 to ten miles over brutal terrain,
he'd be unable to escape or punch through the park's natural barriers.
There was little chance he would reach the nearby highways and communities,
which was a good thing.
Something else they noted was that there was zero cell service in that area of the park.
So in the event Benjamin was using a cell phone to guide him, he'd be out of luck.
But the no cell service thing kind of was a double-edged sword,
because Rangers knew that meant anyone else in that area who needed to be alerted to Benjamin's presence
likely would never have gotten their all-points bulletin about the deadly shooting,
or even know there was a wanted fugitive on the loose.
The News Tribune reported that not long after the official manhunt got underway, park
officials became aware of a group of four hikers who'd registered with NPS before New Year's and
were scheduled to be camping at Reflection Lakes for three days. Those people were in extreme danger
if they came across Benjamin. So as a way to get an emergency message to them, first responders
dropped paper coffee cups from
a helicopter with a handwritten warning scribbled on them. The notes said, quote,
A ranger has been shot. Shooter at large. Call on cell if able to Pierce County Sheriff and take
road to Falls and Sheriff's deputies. We will keep an eye out on you. Do not drive from Paradise
without armed escort.
End quote.
Thanks to those messages, the hikers did get out of Reflection Lake safely with law enforcement escorting them to the Jackson Visitor Center.
Going to lengths like this just shows you how high the stakes were in this situation
and the sense of urgency that law enforcement felt to locate Benjamin and arrest him.
But there would be no gunfire showdown
between police and their fugitive.
As it turned out,
the weather of Mount Rainier had caught up to Benjamin Barnes.
Around 11 a.m. on Monday,
authorities circling in an airplane over the search grid
they believed Benjamin was hiding
out in, caught a glimpse of a man's body, face down in a snowdrift near the base of a waterfall.
Officers in the airplane radioed to ground searchers who spent several more hours hiking
to the spot. According to reporting by the News Tribune and CNN, when SWAT teams arrived to the
area just after one o'clock, they found a young man's lifeless body partially submerged in a stream of water called Paradise Creek.
It was a popular area for hikers and campers,
but at the time was covered with several feet of snow that came all the way up to searchers' chests in some parts.
The spot they found the body in was a slushy, frozen hole in the snow near the base of a waterfall.
News reports state that the young man
was dressed in only a t-shirt, jeans, and one shoe.
NPS officials said that all signs pointed to him
dying from exposure to the elements.
After the Pierce County medical examiner was called in,
he determined that the dead man
was in fact Benjamin Barnes.
The ME found that Benjamin had no signs of trauma
on his body, which meant he'd not
attempted to take his own life. The official findings were that he'd become so hypothermic
that he'd fallen unconscious and drowned in the creek. It was estimated that he died within a
matter of hours after the shooting. In his pockets, authorities found a handgun and magazines with
bullets in them. About 100 yards away from his body, sitting
in the water, investigators found a stash of ammunition and two high-powered firearms, including
the rifle they believed he'd used to shoot Margaret. At two o'clock on Monday afternoon, the FBI, NPS,
and local authorities held a press conference and officially confirmed they'd found Benjamin.
They called off the be on the lookout alert as well.
All of the hundreds of men and women
who'd come to help in the manhunt
were both relieved and saddened
that Margaret's killer had been found,
but unable to be brought in alive.
Mount Rainier's superintendent at the time
told reporters with the Oregonian,
We've been through a horrific experience here
at Mount Rainier National Park.
It's nothing you ever hope to experience, but here it is.
This is not what happens typically in a national park.
It's a tragedy here.
It's a tragedy anywhere.
To lose one of your own is a terrible thing.
End quote.
Though so many people knew Margaret as an exemplary park service ranger,
she was also a mother of two young girls.
She'd spent most of her adult life working in law enforcement in one way or the other to provide for them and set a
good example. According to her obituary published by the News Tribune, Margaret graduated high
school in 1995 and immediately went to college to study wildlife biology. She earned a Bachelor of
Science degree and eventually went on to earn a Master's
in Biology from Fort Hayes State University. After taking a job with the Park Service in 2000,
she started working as a ranger in Bryce Canyon Park in Utah, and it was there that she met her
husband, Eric. By 2004, the couple had moved to Washington, D.C. to work as rangers, and by 2005,
they were married. After the birth of their first
daughter in 2008, the Andersons moved back west to work as rangers in Mount Rainier. While still
working full-time and balancing a lot of new things, Margaret gave birth to the couple's
second daughter in May 2010, just a year and a half before she was murdered. One way I consistently
saw her described by friends and family was that she was loving and caring for most people that she met.
She loved the outdoors and was always ready with a smile
to greet someone interested in learning about nature or the national parks.
Right before Margaret responded to set up her roadblock,
she'd been working in the nearby town of Eatonville,
which is actually where she and her family lived.
She'd been at the local fire department brainstorming with other emergency personnel, trying to come up with plans on how to improve emergency medical treatment access
for people in surrounding communities and within the boundary of the park.
The fire chief in Eatonville told KOMO News that Margaret, quote,
recognized there was an issue with how people were getting emergency medical service in the park
in a timely manner, and she was just one of those people trying to do her part to be a part of the community and help the community, end quote.
And probably the most heartbreaking detail that I learned about Margaret from reading an article
from Behind the Badge Foundation was that just months before her death, she was actually
considering changing careers or at least alternating duties with her job. She lived by the motto
family first and after the birth of her second daughter was thinking of ways to better balance
family life with work life. If that's true, it's devastating to know she did not live to see that
dream become a reality. In the aftermath of Margaret's murder, people who visited the park
and those living in nearby towns left flowers and memorials for her near the Longmire Ranger Station.
One week after the shooting, thousands of people attended a candlelight vigil for her
in Eatonville.
Her funeral service was televised and more than 3,700 people attended in person.
At the time of her death, it was completely legal in the state of Washington to take a
loaded firearm into Mount Rainier National Park.
According to multiple news reports,
a federal law had gone into effect
just two years earlier in 2010
that made firearm possession in national park lands
subject to state laws.
And in Washington, the state law allowed a person to carry,
so people freely carried guns on federal land.
The legality of firearms in parks and the National Park Service as a whole came under
scrutiny in the aftermath of the shooting.
The Oregonian reported that state legislators and activists who supported gun restrictions
and were not fans of the federal law Congress had passed spoke out about the tragedy.
The National Rifle Association chimed in too, stating that it supported the
new federal law, despite the horrible tragedy that had happened to Margaret. In its statement,
the organization said citizens had the right to bear arms in national parks as a means to
protect themselves against any threat, most commonly wild animals. In the weeks following
the tragedy and the stirring gun debate, people wanted to know if there could have been anything done to prevent the events from happening like they
did.
Reporters from outlets all over the state and country peppered NPS with questions, wanting
to know if the law enforcement agencies that had been involved had been efficient enough
with their communications in between the time the shooting happened in King County at the
House party and when Benjamin Barnes had entered the National Park on Sunday morning. NPS's initial response was no. The agency said that
rangers in the park did not have any indication that Benjamin was headed their way when he left
Seattle. NPS vowed to conduct a thorough internal review of the incident, but the results of that
would take a long time to come in. While everyone waited to see what the findings would be, winter turned into spring, and in April, two fellow rangers
who'd been the first to respond to Margaret's call were honored with Medals of Valor. In May,
Pierce County honored Margaret's sacrifice in a special ceremony hosted by the Police Family
Association. The News Tribune reported that around this same time, Eric, Margaret's husband,
announced he would not return to work in Mount Rainier. He kept his job as a park ranger,
but transferred to the NPS's training facility for fire and aviation management in Boise, Idaho.
A lengthy two-year investigative probe conducted by the FBI explored the NPS's handling of Margaret's
death and how the agency prepared rangers for the scenario she was put into on New Year's Day.
In March of 2014, two years after the shooting,
the findings came in.
It recommended that the National Park Service
provide formal tactical training
and practical training exercises
involving high-risk encounters,
something they'd not provided before.
The report also said the agency should evaluate
the personal protective equipment Rangers carried, as well as improve standard operating procedures
across the board. The report read that those actions would be taken seriously and implemented
quickly. According to an article by The Olympian, all of the victims Benjamin shot at the Seattle
House party survived
their injuries. Margaret was the only person whom he'd killed during his violent rampage.
The explanation, or rather series of events that led him to pull the trigger that New Year's Day
and forever steal the rest of the years of the young mother's life seems clear enough,
but truly, only he will ever know the why behind his actions. What I know for sure is that
Margaret Anderson is a hero, and she should always be remembered as one. A park visitor who was housed
inside the Jackson Visitor Center and had asked Margaret for parking directions minutes before
she was killed was later interviewed by the News Tribune, and I think he sums it up best with this
quote. I'm positive she saved my
life. I was talking to her just minutes before it happened. If that car came up the road, if he had
an automatic weapon, I wouldn't be here. I just thank her. She was completely selfless. End quote. Park Predators is an AudioChuck production.
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