Park Predators - The Tracker
Episode Date: May 13, 2025When a botched home invasion leads law enforcement to pursue two dangerous men into the Idaho wilderness, the fallout is fatal for the one forest service officer who dared to face the fugitives head-o...n.View source material and photos for this episode at: parkpredators.com/the-tracker 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 doesn't technically take place within the
bounds of a national or state park.
But if you were to look at it from a bird's eye view, it's the closest thing to it.
I'm talking about Bonner County, Idaho, which sits extremely close to the U.S.-Canada border.
There's an abundance of animals in this region, including birds of prey, pheasants,
and swans. Some rather frightening species of wildlife that roam this terrain include
coyotes, mountain lions, black bears, and even grizzly bears.
But on a cold January day in 1989, it wasn't apex predators that residents were worried
about. It was two armed men, on the loose in the forest, who were responsible for
an act of bloodshed that marked one of the most notorious crimes in
Northern Idaho's history.
The devastating impact their actions had on families from this area is as real
today as it was 36 years ago.
But something else that's been memorialized forever is the legacy and sacrifice of the
one law enforcement officer who dared to stand in their way.
This is Park Predators. I'm going to go to the bathroom. Around 6.30 p.m. on Wednesday, January 11, 1989, a woman named Tammy Polenik was relaxing
with her family inside her mother's house near the small town of Sagal, Idaho.
In total, there were nine people in the home.
Tammy, who was pregnant, her husband Mark, her brother, her brother's wife,
and a few teenagers and kids.
Because the house was large and had several stories,
it was the perfect place for the group to vacation together
while simultaneously acting as house sitters for Tammy's mother, Lee, who happened to be out of town in California.
As everyone was settling in for the evening, most of the kids stayed on the entry level
floor of the home, which had some bedrooms and I think the living room,
while Tammy and the other adults hung out on the lower level.
Sometimes shortly after 6.30 p.m. though,
she and her husband Mark heard a noticeable thud
come from upstairs.
So they decided to check things out,
and I imagine just make sure the kids were okay.
But when Mark rounded the corner
at the top of the staircase that led to the upper level,
a man wearing all black confronted him
and struck him in the head with the butt of a gun,
then said, quote, hey dude, this is for real, end quote.
Right after hitting Mark, the masked man forced the adults upstairs and it became clear to
everyone that there was another assailant in the house helping to corral the family
members into the living room.
The victims were all directed to lay down on their stomachs and then bound with duct
tape to ensure they couldn't escape or fight back.
While all of that was going on, the two suspects repeatedly threatened to
kill the victims and demanded to know where the home safe was located.
Tammy desperately tried to explain to the attackers that there was no safe in her
mom's house, but the masked men didn't believe her.
She later told producers for Oxygen's episode of Killer Siblings titled Prat,
that at one point in time,
her mom had kept a safe on the premises because she'd operated a business and
usually stored some funds at home. But that was no longer the case.
So for several hours,
the suspects just went round and round making threats and demands and essentially terrorizing Tammy and her family.
The intruders gathered a gun from the home and a small amount of cash, but they seemingly
didn't want any jewelry or other valuables.
Eventually, around 9.30 p.m., one of Tammy's nieces was able to crawl out of the living
room undetected and dialed 911.
The nearest law enforcement agency that first received that call
was the city of Sandpoint police department. Sandpoint seems to be the nearest larger city
to where Tammy and her family were staying, which makes sense why the call was routed to them.
And shortly after learning about the burglary in progress, Sandpoint PD looped in the Bonner
County Sheriff's Office, who also sent deputies to the scene.
When units arrived, they could see that lights were on inside
Tammy's mom's house and people were moving around.
So a few members of law enforcement walked around the
back of the structure to get a better look.
But within minutes of doing that, they heard gunshots go off inside.
What authorities didn't know was that those shots were a result of a tussle that
had broken out between the masked men and Tammy's husband, Mark.
According to that episode of Killer Siblings I mentioned a minute ago, once it
became clear that police and the sheriff's office were outside and closing in on
the house, the suspects holding the family hostage had become very agitated and
kind of started to panic.
In fact, one of them decided to take Tammy's niece's 19-year-old boyfriend as a hostage and go outside. But Tammy's husband didn't want that to happen, so he jumped into action.
He broke free from his bindings and charged one of the masked men.
But unfortunately, his effort failed, and he wound up getting shot in the forehead and leg.
By some miracle, though, he still up getting shot in the forehead and leg.
By some miracle though he still was conscious and able to talk and move.
Right after that the two masked men bolted out of the house with their teenage hostage in tow.
Meanwhile back outside members of law enforcement saw them emerge from the house and make their way onto a porch landing.
Authorities ordered them to stop but one of the men hollered that if officers didn't back off,
he would kill the hostage.
Not wanting things to escalate even more,
the sheriff's office and police department
pulled back their personnel and basically just had to watch
as the robbers walked down an outside staircase
and disappeared into a nearby tree line.
Shortly after that, Tammy and her brother ran out of their mom's place and made their way to authorities.
They explained that Mark had been shot and needed medical attention, but other than that,
everyone else in the house was okay.
After getting Mark medical care and determining that he was going to survive,
authorities gathered statements from Tammy and the other survivors of the home.
They also cleared the house to make sure no one else was still inside.
Then they turned their attention to finding the suspects who'd taken off into the woods.
But just as they were doing that, the young man who'd been taken hostage materialized
from the treeline and sprinted across the home's lawn to join his girlfriend's family.
He told authorities that the two men who'd taken him at gunpoint had decided
at the last minute to let him go. He described how his captors had dragged him through the trees and
across a nearby roadway called Lignite Road. Then they'd made a beeline to a gold-colored vehicle
before one of them abruptly ordered the other to release him. After that, the teenager said the
masked men got into their car and took off, headed south.
Now at that point, other members of law enforcement had become aware of the unfolding situation and were on alert.
By sheer coincidence, a detective for Bonner County, who was just a few miles away from the crime scene,
saw a gold Chevrolet Monte Carlo speed past him headed in the opposite direction.
This detective had heard the description of the alleged suspect's vehicle come over his radio and surmised that the drivers of the gold car that had just
passed him were likely involved in the home invasion.
So he whipped his cruiser around and started pursuing the Monte Carlo.
He chased the vehicle north in the direction of the city of Sandpoint, and waiting to intercept
the car there was a group of city police officers.
But the driver of the Monte Carlo avoided that roadblock and took a hard left on a roadway
called Lakeshore Drive, which happened to be slick and covered with snow at the time.
Despite treacherous conditions for a car chase, the detective who was pursuing the gold car
didn't fall back.
Well, that is until someone sitting in the passenger seat of the Chevy leaned out and
shot several times into the detective's windshield.
That was the point when the detective figured enough was enough and he pulled back.
The gold car then sped out of sight and thankfully the detective wasn't injured, but his front
windshield was toast. From that point, it was up to his colleagues to find the gold car and its occupants.
Around 10 p.m., even more officers and deputies got involved in the manhunt,
and teams eventually found the suspect's vehicle wrecked into a snowbank.
It was on the left-hand side of the roadway it was last seen on.
No one was inside, but several rounds of ammunition, magazines, and firearms were in the trunk.
The caliber of the abandoned ammo indicated that the suspects were armed with pistols
and at least one shotgun.
In the snow, trailing away from the car were shoe prints that led investigators over a
snowbank and further into the woods.
Before setting off to follow the prints, the Sheriff's Office looked up the
Monte Carlo's license plate information and discovered that it was registered to
a local resident named Joseph Pratt.
Some deputies who worked for the Sheriff's Office at the time recognized
Joseph's name because he'd been living in Sandpoint.
They also knew he had a brother named James Pratt, who'd been seen around town
from time to time.
Joseph was 27 years old and James was 29.
Armed with this information,
investigators with the city and county agencies,
as well as the US Forest Service
and Idaho Department of Fish and Game,
followed the foot tracks that they believed
the Pratt brothers had left in the snow.
One set of tracks had been made by a boot,
but the
other appeared to have come from a running shoe, which investigators knew wasn't really
appropriate footwear for walking in the snow.
The manhunt stretched for one hour, to two, then three, and eventually more than four
hours because the terrain that searchers were having to cover was fairly unforgiving.
Authorities were reportedly wading through knee-deep and waist-deep snow, thick forest, and just all around miserable conditions.
Around two o'clock in the morning, which would have technically been Thursday, January 12th,
more resources and personnel were brought in to assist in the search.
Law enforcement was growing increasingly worried that the Prats would go near several vacation cabins
in the area while attempting to cross
the nearby Ponderay River.
Interestingly, during the search,
the Sheriff's Office as an agency
didn't have tracking dogs as a resource,
so it was totally up to the men and women on foot
to track the suspects' movements and direction.
At one point, authorities saw where the two brothers had walked close to a few rental
cottages, so to be sure they weren't hiding inside one of them, investigators went through
each building individually.
They quickly determined the Prats weren't there and picked up their trail again, which
led back into the woods.
Around 2.24 a.m., the manhunt teams realized that the suspect's tracks had gone over a suspended railroad bridge that went across a small lake.
But getting across this bridge wasn't going to be easy for searchers because the railroad ties were slippery and covered in ice.
Not to mention, law enforcement were kind of sitting ducks while they attempted the feat.
They had no idea if the Prats were hiding on the other side waiting to pick them off one by one or what. It was a pretty frightening reality, but eventually the search teams did
make it over safely and continued tracking their targets.
About two hours later, around 4 a.m., the crews who'd been following the Brothers Trail
all night were worn out and needed a break. So the investigating agencies made the collective decision
to pause the manhunt until fresh personnel arrived
around 6 a.m.
One of the first teams that launched the renewed search
consisted of four men and included a 41-year-old
Forest Service officer named Brent Jacobson,
who sometimes went by the nickname Jake.
Brent was a former Navy SEAL who had a thorough knowledge of
the landscape in northern Idaho. He was from Provo, Utah, but had lived a good portion
of his life in Twin Falls. As a young man, he became very familiar with creeks and canyons
in that area. Around 1966, after finishing his time in the Navy, he worked for the U.S.
Forest Service as a part-time firefighter. When he went full-time for that agency in 1974, he was stationed in Kootenay County, Idaho,
before eventually transferring to the Sandpoint Ranger District in 1985.
Because of all of that experience, he was heralded as a very skilled hunter, outdoorsman,
and tracker. At the time, he was employed as both a fire control officer
and law enforcement officer with the U.S. Forest Service.
For a few hours, Brent and his team tracked the Pratt brothers
through the snow and eventually came across a roadway.
It was clear that the assailants had tried
to throw law enforcement off the scent a few times
by attempting to walk in one another's shoe tracks.
But their efforts didn't deter Brent.
He followed their trail for some 200 yards.
By five o'clock, authorities had cornered the two suspects in a small stretch of woods
near a street named Smith Creek Road.
The spot was about eight miles west of the city of Sandpoint.
The location was uniquely isolated, so there was nowhere for the Pratt brothers to run.
Around 5.15 p.m., Brent and a 24-year-old
Bonner County deputy accompanying him,
named Steve Barbieri, walked towards the general area
they believed the suspects were hiding,
but were suddenly attacked with a volley of gunfire
as they entered a heavily wooded ravine.
The moment was chaotic and visibility was poor, not to mention there was little to
no radio reception between officers because of how remote the terrain was.
So it was hard to tell who was where or where the shots were even coming from.
As soon as the gunfire stopped though, another sheriff's deputy on Brent's team
who was further back,
heard what he thought sounded like a person gasping for air or moaning.
Basically, it's what he described as someone's dying breaths.
Then Brent's partner, Steve Barbieri, emerged from the woods and
told the rest of the team that Brent had been shot.
Steve explained how he and Brent had knowingly gotten fairly close to
the Pratt brothers
who were dressed in black and hiding below a pine tree.
They'd ordered the suspects to show their hands, but the men didn't.
Instead, the brothers blasted the officers, and Brent had gone down almost immediately.
Steve said he'd been able to fire off a few rounds from his shotgun at some point while
diving for cover, and then switch to a handgun, but that gun had jammed, making it impossible for him to continue to return
fire.
He said that in the scurry, he and Brent had gotten separated, and eventually he had to
retreat to avoid getting shot too.
So by 5.20pm, it was clear to everyone involved in the manhunt that Brent was down somewhere
in the forest and needed medical attention.
But authorities had to use caution because it wasn't clear right away whether the two
suspects were still in the area.
Eventually though, Brent's colleagues determined that the Prats had fled, and so they had to
make the tough decision to try and find them before going to check on Brent.
About 40 minutes after this, authorities got a call from a man
named Max Singleton, who lived at a house near the shooting scene.
And Max, who was home with his two sons at the time, told
investigators that Joseph and James Pratt were at his place and wanted to surrender.
Not long after that, a crisis response team arrived and
by 6.50 PM, the Prattats were taken into custody without further incident.
Finally, everyone could breathe a sigh of relief because the nearly 22-hour manhunt was over.
Reporting by Pam Newburn for the Shoshone News Press and an article in the Times News,
explained that it wasn't until the Prats were apprehended that law enforcement teams were able to return to the area where Brent had been
shot and look for him. The reality when they finally reached him though was grim.
When Brent's team members found him he was lying face up in the snow, dead.
His.223 Ruger rifle was sitting across the left side of his body, and holstered to his
side was a Smith & Wesson revolver.
He was still donning his camouflage snowsuit and bulletproof vest.
He'd been shot in his thigh and back by a 12 gauge shotgun.
A round had entered just beneath his bulletproof vest. Based on the severity of his injuries,
it was assumed that he'd bled out within minutes of being shot.
It wasn't immediately clear if he'd gotten the chance to fire his weapon at the suspects before
he was gunned down, though some source material later reported that he had actually been able
to discharge at least two rounds before falling to the ground. Those shots, though some source material later reported that he had actually been able to discharge at least two rounds
before falling to the ground.
Those shots, though, were not believed to have struck anyone.
His team members then removed his body from the woods and
transported him to a forensic pathologist in Spokane,
Washington for a formal autopsy, which was scheduled for the
following day.
Later that evening, investigators visited his wife, Barbara,
17-year-old stepson, Joseph,
and 13-year-old stepdaughter, Angela,
at the family's home in Sagal.
They had to deliver the tragic news.
Angela told producers for Oxygen
that when her mother found out what happened,
she literally crumbled to the floor with grief.
Angela said that even though Brent,
who she referred to by the
nickname Jake, wasn't her biological father, she'd grown up
with him most of her life and in so many ways he was a dad to her.
She explained that losing him devastated everyone in her family.
At the time of the crime, Barbara, who'd been married to Brent
for nearly a decade, told the Times News that her husband
genuinely loved being outside,
and he'd always told her that if he were to die,
he wanted it to happen in the woods.
Additional news coverage states that Brent was the first US Forest Service employee
to be killed in the line of duty up until that point.
So it was a really big deal.
His manager and other coworkers with the Forest Service told the Times News and Shoshone
News Press that Brent was liked and respected by all of his colleagues.
He was also a dedicated family man who often spoke about his wife and stepchildren even
in settings that were, for lack of better phrasing, mostly brofests.
His brother-in-law told reporters that the whole reason Brent became a
Forest Service officer was because he loved the outdoors so much and was
dedicated to protecting it.
In the shootout, James Pratt had been shot too in his left leg.
So immediately following his capture, he was taken to Bonner General Hospital to
undergo surgery and was expected to make a full recovery.
Because Brent had died as a result of the brothers' actions, both of them were charged with individual counts of first-degree murder,
attempted first-degree murder, second-degree kidnapping, first-degree burglary, aggravated assault,
aggravated assault on a police officer, and robbery. After their arraignments, they were held without bail.
Neither man agreed to speak
with law enforcement after the incident, which was unfortunate because what everyone wanted to know
was why. Why had they done this? Turns out the answer was fairly straightforward, but also
kind of a wild tale. According to the available source material, the Pratt brothers were originally from Michigan
and had experienced poverty.
Their father and mother divorced when they were kids, and after that the brothers moved
frequently with their dad.
Of the two of them, James was reportedly the more confident brother, who was physically
taller and I think just viewed as the leader of the pair.
More than a decade before this crime, their dad had moved them to Idaho to mine gold and silver
with the goal of getting rich.
But that endeavor fizzled out with poor results
after about five years.
And when the brothers were in their late teens
and early 20s, their father decided to leave Idaho entirely,
but James and Joseph continued living there.
They found work at a cedar mill
and Joseph even ended up getting married and starting
a family of his own.
By the time the year 1980 rolled around though, both men had fallen on hard times financially.
During that time, they struck up a friendship with a woman named Gloria White, who owned
a large cabin in the Katka Mountain area of Idaho, which is about an hour and a half northeast
of Sandpoint.
Gloria had a tendency to befriend and shelter folks
who had criminal pasts or who needed to catch a break in life.
The Pratt brothers fit the latter description,
so at one point they'd ask Gloria for a loan.
But instead of providing them with cash,
she introduced them to another guy
who was staying at her house named Jim.
Jim, as it turns out though, was not that guy's real name. His true identity was Christopher Boyce, who was, wait for it,
the son of an FBI agent who was a convicted spy on the run from federal
authorities.
I know, this part of the story is wild, like I said.
I know, this part of the story is wild, like I said. In 1977, Christopher was convicted of espionage for selling satellite technology secrets from
the CIA to the Soviet Union.
For that crime, he was sentenced to 40 years in a California federal prison, but escaped
about three years later in 1980.
During his short time behind bars, though, Christopher had picked up a few tips
from other inmates on how to successfully rob banks.
So when he escaped, he went straight to committing
that kind of crime.
Along the way, he met and enlisted James and Joseph
and one of their other brothers named Kendall Pratt
to help him rob about six banks in Idaho, Washington,
and Montana.
According to news coverage and court documents,
the Prats usually acted as Christopher's getaway driver.
By 1981, though, the men's arrangement
had soured because James had started
to suspect that Christopher wasn't giving him
and his brothers their fair share of the spoils
from the bank robbery jobs.
So infighting within the group resulted in a fallout
between the Prats
and Christopher. One that would eventually come back to bite Christopher
big time. In the summer of 1981, fresh off the brother split with Christopher,
James was reading some newspaper articles and learned that the US
Marshals were offering a $15,000 reward for Christopher's capture. James and Joseph used that information to their advantage
and became paid government informants,
eventually leading investigators to Christopher.
On August 21, 1981, he was apprehended in Washington state.
In an exchange for their cooperation,
the Prats were given immunity from prosecution
for the bank robberies, and at least one of them pocketed the reward money for helping the U.S. Marshals catch Christopher.
An article by Dan Drury for the Bonner County Daily Bee also reported that in addition to
raking in the reward money, the U.S. Marshals also gave the Prats other payments or subsidies
that equated to about $10,000, which would have been more like $25,000 back in the
early 1980s when you consider inflation. And if all of this is starting to sound like the plot of
a Hollywood movie, that's because it is. According to Dan Drury's reporting for the Bonner County
Daily Bee, there was a feature film about Christopher Boyce's life and eventual capture that was released in 1985 called The Falcon and the Snowman.
It starred Sean Penn, Timothy Hutton and Pat Hingle.
An author named Robert Lindsay also wrote two books about the story titled The Falcon and the Snowman and the Flight of the Falcon, which were released in the late 70s and early 80s.
which were released in the late 70s and early 80s. In those novels, it's clarified that in addition
to Christopher being held responsible for his crimes,
Gloria White, the woman who'd housed him in the Prats,
was also eventually prosecuted
and sentenced to five years in prison.
An article I found by the Associated Press explained
that Christopher Boyce was released from prison early
in March 2003.
But back to the Prats for a little bit.
It's unclear from the source material what the brothers did with the reward money
they received from ratting on Christopher or how long those funds lasted them.
There's just not enough coverage out there about what they were up to between 1982
and 1989.
But what I can tell you is that Tammy Polenick told producers for Oxygen's Killer Siblings
episode that at some point Joseph had worked for her mother, Lee.
He wasn't exactly a full-time employee or anything, more like a handyman.
But apparently during his time on Lee's property, he'd come to suspect that she kept money
in a safe at her house.
In fact, Joseph later told reporter Kelly McBride that he
suspected Lee kept money from her restaurant and nightclub
businesses at her house.
And he actually believes she still owed him like $500 or
something in back wages.
So that's why when he and James came back to Sandpoint on
January 11, 1989, after visiting with one of their
brothers in Montana, he'd gotten the impulsive idea to rob Lee's house.
So in hindsight, it made total sense why the brothers had been so insistent during the
home invasion that there was a safe in the house.
However, like I mentioned earlier, they didn't know what Tammy knew,
which was that her mom no longer kept one in the home.
So I think that indicates there had to have been at least a few months or
possibly years between when Joseph had last been on Lee's property and when he
and James committed the home invasion.
Anyway, after the brothers' initial appearances in court, the Bonner County
prosecutor announced that he intended to seek the death penalty against them for
Brent's murder.
It was also at this point in the investigation that the FBI and U.S. Marshals were contacted
about the case since Brent was technically a federal employee.
Though the source material doesn't explicitly state this, I also think another reason why
these bigger agencies were requested to be involved was to help the Bonner County Sheriff's
Department review their agency's actions and everything that had transpired
during the manhunt. You see, in the aftermath of the chase, Brent's
death and the Pratt Brothers' eventual arrests, Bonner County
Sheriff admitted that the situation could have been handled
better in terms of planning and execution. The Associated Press
reported that the sheriff said the incident was all around a very
difficult response to coordinate because of the terrain it took place in,
but he agreed law enforcement's actions and tactics should be critiqued, at least as a learning moment.
For example, the agency wanted to examine every aspect of Deputy Steve Barbieri's response since he was the only other law enforcement officer who'd physically been with Brent when the shootout happened.
Through a series of experiments, the Sheriff's Office tried to figure out why Steve's handgun had allegedly jammed when he said he'd tried to fire it at the Pratt's.
Did the cold weather have something to do with it?
Was it Steve panicking?
Was the firearm just defective?
The best conclusion the department could come to was that the gun had not malfunctioned due to the cold.
But rather Steve, who was wearing very thick gloves during the shootout,
had accidentally gripped the trigger guard of the handgun instead of actually pulling the trigger.
There was also a question of how many shots had been fired between the Prats and law enforcement.
Some personnel who were stationed near the crime scene and were assisting Steven Brett
said they heard what they described as a volley of gunshots exchanged in the woods.
Upwards of 20 rounds, actually.
Now that was an interesting detail because it indicated that the shootout had spanned
for perhaps longer than initially estimated or at least involved a lot more firepower
than what struck Brett. One of Bonner County's sheriff's deputies later stated in court
that it almost sounded like the first couple shots were slower
than the latter ones.
However, towards the end, the blast got so fast he didn't
think whoever was firing was a member of law enforcement
because it just didn't seem like the kind of firing cadence
an officer or deputy would do.
Reading between the lines, I think maybe firing in such
quick succession like that could be considered or perceived
as careless, which typically trained law enforcement officers
try not to do in situations like this.
Anyway, on January 17th, while the shootout was still in
the beginning stage of being reviewed, Brent's friends
and family, along with some 750 to 800
law enforcement officers, held a funeral and burial service for him in Sandpoint.
They remembered him as a hero, a father, a hunter, a firefighter, a gardener, a
baker, a dog lover, and a friend. The pastor who conducted the service read a
statement about Brent that his co-workers drafted, which said, quote, Brent was a man who was so full of life that he seemed to be nearly bursting
at the seams with it. You worked harder around him because you were dragged along in his
wake and did not want to be left behind, end quote. Brent's mother also read a eulogy
that explained how much he loved the outdoors, even as a child.
She said that his whole life he'd had this unbreakable bond with Mother Nature and always
reveled in the freedom of being outside amongst the trees, animals, and mountains.
Brent's dad had this amazing summary of his late son when he described Brent as a quote,
beautiful flower, flowers bloom, then they wilt, and then they die.
We only have them for a short period of time, but at least we had a flower."
The day after the funeral, Sandpoint City Council members passed a resolution to formally
memorialize Brent's sacrifice as a law enforcement officer and commend city police
officers for their actions during the events that led up to his death.
Around this time though, some rumors began to surface that suggested perhaps Brent's death wasn't actually the direct result of Joseph and James' actions.
Now, I know that may feel like kind of a whiplash moment for some of you,
but it's a super interesting detail that I think is worth taking a closer look at.
According to reporting by Pam Newburn, there had been some speculation following Brent's
death that it might have been a member of law enforcement, possibly Steve Barbieri, who shot him.
The sheriff of Bonner County at the time quickly tried to dispel those rumors though by telling
reporters that such a scenario was impossible.
According to the sheriff's comments on the matter, he said that the ammunition that was
retrieved from Brent's body came from a double-aught buckshot round for a shotgun.
But the ammo that law enforcement was using, specifically Steve Barbieri, was double-aught buckshot round for a shotgun. But the ammo that law enforcement was using,
specifically Steve Barbieri, was triple-aught buckshot.
So a totally different diameter round.
Now, Steve had also fired a 9mm handgun during the shootout,
but that gun was not determined to have been what killed Brent.
So all good there.
The coroner of Bonner County confirmed the same thing.
He said that there was no way Steve or any of the other first responders
on scene were responsible for Brent's death.
In fact, a Remington 12 gauge shotgun that authorities had seized from
the Pratt brothers was the only firearm in the mix that was reportedly
loaded with double-aught buckshot.
Also around the same time, the Pratt Brothers' old friend turned enemy,
Christopher Boyce, spoke to the press from prison via his lawyer and said that he was convinced
Brent Jacobson would have lived if his former accomplices had not been given immunity for
their testimony against him, which like, he's not wrong. It is a fact that if James and Joseph had
been put in prison for their roles in the bank robberies that involved Christopher,
they likely would have never crossed paths with Brent.
Christopher issued this response about the situation via his lawyer,
quote, If the charges are true, it is quite unfortunate the immunity given the Pratt brothers in exchange for exaggerated and unreliable testimony against me
now appears to have facilitated the unnecessary death
of a law enforcement officer."
End quote.
Another defense lawyer who'd represented Gloria White,
that woman who was convicted for aiding Christopher,
told the Spokesman Review that during her trial,
he tried to convince jurors that the Prats
couldn't be trusted and were what the lawyer described
as vicious people
who should have never been given immunity from prosecution back in the early 1980s.
But we know that federal authorities didn't really take that sentiment to heart back in the day,
which is why the Prats were roaming free when they carried out their crime spree in 1989.
Kelly McBride reported for the Spokesman Review that James and Joseph claimed that law enforcement officers who chased them after the home
invasion in Sagal were well aware of their former association with Christopher Boyce.
The duo claimed that police and the sheriff's deputies in the home invasion incident
were motivated to catch them dead or alive simply because some members of Idaho law
enforcement had held a grudge that both of them skirted punishment for their roles in the bank robbery cases.
Joseph told McBride, quote,
Once they figured out who we were with our connections with the Boyce deal and all, they weren't going to bring us back alive.
I think that because we've gotten away with everything we've ever done, the Boyce thing and all, they wanted to really burn us.
Our past, they don't like that at all.
This is a mess.
It's just a mess.
It just got out of control.
No one was supposed to be heard."
End quote.
In that same jailhouse interview, James told the newspaper that neither he nor his brother
expected a bunch of people to be at Lee Turner's house on January 12,
1989, especially kids.
He claimed that the moment they realized children were inside, they considered bailing on the
robbery because they didn't want it to turn into a hostage situation.
But one thing led to another and things just escalated from there.
James also explained that it was never his or his brother's intention to injure or kill
the first deputy who'd pursued them at the start of the car chase.
He said he'd tried to aim for the radiator of that deputy's car just to disable the
vehicle so he'd stop pursuing them, but instead he'd shot higher than he intended to and
the blast pierced through the deputy's windshield.
He claimed that the entire time he and Joseph were on the run, they genuinely were afraid
that if they stopped fleeing,
members of law enforcement would kill them.
Eventually, after nearly a day of being pursued,
they got so tired they had to stop to sleep.
James said that's when Brent Jacobson and Steve Barbieri found them.
James claimed it was one of the lawmen who'd shot first,
not him or his brother.
And it was a bullet from that first volley that had wounded him in the leg.
As a reaction to that shot, he'd fired back, but he said he had no idea he'd actually
fatally wounded Brent.
James admitted that he'd been armed with the caliber shotgun that killed Brent, but
it was never his intention to do so.
Regarding the pair's time on the run in the unforgiving woods, James told the newspaper that the longer the manhunt dragged on,
the more he thought about dying.
In late January 1989, just a few weeks after the crime,
a four-day preliminary hearing was held in Bonner County,
and the case took an interesting turn when James' court appointed
public defender and formed the presiding judge that he could no longer represent his client because James refused to let him
be his lawyer. This situation didn't make the judge happy and she actually ended
up tossing the attorney in jail for contempt of court and ordering him to
pay a $100 fine. Joseph also wasn't a big fan of his court-appointed attorney,
Bruce Green, because apparently both of the Prats wanted to wait until their family members in Colorado
could arrange for them to hire private attorneys.
So they'd asked the judge to postpone the preliminary hearing until that happened.
But the judge was like, no way, and refused to grant that request.
So the end result of the antics at the preliminary hearing was that James' defense attorney
spent a little bit of time in jail and the hearing still happened. Some of the first witnesses to take the
stand were the victims who'd survived the home invasion robbery. Some of their testimony was
circumstantial though because apparently none of them other than maybe that 19 year old who the
Prats had taken as a hostage actually got a good look at their faces because
they'd been dressed in all black and wore face masks.
Mark Polanick testified, though, that he sort of ruffled one of the brothers' face coverings
during the scuffle which resulted in him getting shot, and he swore that the guy who he tussled
with was Joseph Pratt.
But even as confident as Mark was about that detail, it still wasn't a 100% positive ID.
Also during the preliminary hearing, Steve Barbieri, Brent's companion in the woods during
the shootout, testified that right before Brent was killed, he'd been walking in the snow about
three to five feet behind the Forest Service officer when they emerged into a clearing.
Steve said that out of the corner of his eye, he thought he noticed a person's silhouette about 10 to 15 feet away from him and Brent.
And in that moment, Steve yelled for whoever it was to hold it right there, with Brent
then issuing his own warning, Sheriff's Office, don't move.
However, Steve claimed that as soon as they spoke, a muzzle flash burst in their direction,
and that's seemingly when all hell broke loose.
Steve testified that he'd unloaded all seven rounds that were in his shotgun, then ran
about 60 yards away from the suspects to take cover before arming himself with his pistol
and trying to return more fire, which he was unsuccessful in doing.
When the defense cross-examined Steve, the young deputy denied that he or Brent had shot
their weapons first.
In general, Steve described what happened as basically getting surprised by the defendants.
In fact, at one point while he'd been retreating, he'd found a place to lay down and forced
himself to stay very still because he didn't want the suspects to get a second chance at
getting a jump on him.
He testified that he genuinely believed Brent was going to be all right and make it out
of the situation.
He didn't realize until a while after he'd retreated that the 41-year-old had been fatally
injured.
Evidence the prosecution presented to the court included a videotape of the crime scene
and Brent's body, as well as nearly 150 items of other evidence collected in the case.
By the end of the preliminary hearing, the judge ordered that each of the Prats would
stand trial for their alleged crimes, and she even heaped on some additional charges.
According to an article in the Coeur d'Alene Press, the brothers now faced first-degree
burglary, 10 counts of aggravated assault, robbery, second-degree kidnapping, aggravated
battery, aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer kidnapping, aggravated battery, aggravated
assault on a law enforcement officer, two counts of attempted first degree murder, and
first degree murder. Bringing their charges to a grand total of 18 felonies each. So yeah,
a lot, a lot. At their arraignment on February 7th, 1989, James and Joseph both entered not guilty pleas and their trial was scheduled for early May 1989.
It was expected to last four weeks and cost Bonner County
close to $250,000.
A few weeks into things though, the men's cases were severed,
but James' trial scheduled for May and Joseph's pushed to June.
Something else interesting was that James's court-appointed attorney,
the same one who'd been jailed previously for contempt,
got into another spat of sorts with the court when he filed a motion to have a new judge
who'd been appointed to the case disqualified from overseeing the trial.
One judge prior to that judge had already been disqualified per request from Joseph's
attorney Bruce Green.
So to say things between the defense, the prosecution and the court itself
were growing tense is a bit of an understatement.
But the defense's whole strategy in doing this was to keep the
brothers trials separate.
The state wanted the cases consolidated, but the defendants didn't.
The defense attorneys wanted James and Joseph to each have their own day in court with their own judge and jury and that's exactly what ended up
being granted for the time being.
In another unprecedented twist, James and his attorney requested that he be
allowed to visit
the location in the woods where Brent Jacobson died because he wanted to be, quote,
chained or otherwise secured to a tree or other appropriate fixed object within the
shooting site, and all law enforcement officers at the shooting site shall withdraw beyond
hearing distance from the location where defendant is so secured, in order that defendant may privately confer with his attorney and the attorney's assistance
at said location." But even as wild as that request was, the judge in
prosecution ended up agreeing to it. Also at that point, it was decided the trials
would be moved to Kootenay County, Idaho, because Bonner County had become too
saturated with information about the case to produce an impartial jury. the trials would be moved to Kootenay County, Idaho, because Bonner County had become too saturated
with information about the case
to produce an impartial jury.
Between April and May, 1989,
several additional motions were filed and argued in court,
which resulted in Joseph and James's cases being unsevered,
meaning they would proceed to trial at the same time
with the same jury and judge.
And the attempted murder charge
for the brothers' attack on Mark Polanick also got dismissed.
By that point, I don't think the defense was as concerned about those issues as much anymore.
Instead, James' attorney seemed to turn his attention to suppressing statements that he'd made in that jailhouse interview with spokesman review reporter Kelly McBride.
James' attorney also asked the court not to show Brent's autopsy videotape or photos
to jurors or display any of the bloodstained clothing he or Joseph had been wearing on
the evening of the crime.
But those requests were later denied.
A detail I found kind of interesting while researching this case involved Max Singleton,
the guy whose house the Prats ultimately surrendered at.
Turns out, Max had previously been arrested for what authorities described as a major
cocaine and marijuana trafficking organization not long before this whole situation went
down.
He was actually on house arrest when the Prats showed up.
Now I think it's only natural to wonder why out of all the homes the Pratt brothers could
have fled to, they ended up at Max's.
Authorities told the press that they didn't think there was any connection between Max
and the brothers, with one official saying that James and Joseph simply arrived at Max's
house because they were looking for any place to flee to.
Max confirmed this for reporter Pam Newburn when he told her that he didn't know either
of the Pratt brothers prior to this incident.
He explained that when they showed up at his doorstep late at night on January 12th, they
asked if he would give them a ride out of the area, which he declined to do.
After that, they wanted Max to let them inside so they could get warm and he agreed to do
that, but only if they left their guns outside on a windowsill, which they did. After that, Max said he spent about a half hour or so talking to the brothers and encouraging
them to turn themselves in to investigators.
Max was called to testify for the prosecution during the defendant's preliminary hearing,
but it seems like he only agreed to do that in exchange for some potential leniency when
it came to his pending federal drug case.
But I'm not sure how great of a deal he got for his cooperation in the Pratt case, in exchange for some potential leniency when it came to his pending federal drug case.
But I'm not sure how great of a deal he got
for his cooperation in the Pratt case
because Thomas Skeen later reported
for the Shoshone News Press
that Max eventually pleaded guilty
to being the head of a drug ring
that operated in Northern Idaho
and was subsequently sentenced
to 10 years in a federal prison.
Anyway, on May 19th, 1989, the Pratt's trial finally got underway.
The defense attorneys argued kind of two things.
One, that their clients were claiming self-defense in Brent's death, and two, it was important
for jurors to realize that the shootout and home invasion were separate crimes.
The crux of that defense strategy was to try and convince jurors that the end of the manhunt
occurred almost an entire day after the home invasion, and their clients had perhaps not
exercised the best judgment after being on the run for so long.
The defense emphasized the notion that it was Brent, or more likely Steve Barbieri,
who'd fired first, not James.
But the prosecution disagreed with that version of events.
The state insisted that it was James who'd fired first
and that it was his 12 gauge shotgun
that had accidentally caused the wound to his own leg,
not an initial round fired by the lawmen.
Still, Joseph and James Pratt testified
in their own defense on the stand
that it was the other way around.
The closest version of the truth about what really happened in the woods that evening
came out when a criminologist called by the defense testified about how many total shots
had been fired and, equally as important, whose firearms those projectiles had come
from.
This defense expert explained that at least 32 rounds had been discharged during the incident,
which included at least 10 shots from Brent's gun,
which was seemingly brand new information no one in the public
had really known definitively prior to this.
The criminologist's findings were a matter of contention, though,
because the defense viewed his conclusions as proof
that Deputy Steve Barbieri had been the initial shooter,
but the state contended that was not
what the expert's findings showed.
When the case went to the jury on the evening of June 7th,
they deliberated for about 17 hours
before finding both brothers guilty.
Pam Newburn reported that James was convicted
of 15 felonies, including Brent's murder,
and Joseph was found guilty of 16 felonies,
which also included murder. Some of Brent's family, and Joseph was found guilty of 16 felonies, which also included murder.
Some of Brent's family members reacted to the news,
how you might expect, satisfied.
Barbara, Brent's widow, wrote a letter to the Bonner County Bee
newspaper after the verdict was read,
which stated that she was happy with the verdict
and performance of the prosecutor.
She expressed that in her opinion,
her husband's killers had ample opportunities to stop their
rampage before Brent was killed, but they didn't.
She wrote, quote, every time they had a chance, they had an option.
They always chose the brutal force option, end quote.
Barbara went on to explain that she refused to let what happened destroy her life or make
her crumble.
The last time anyone had been executed in the state of Idaho
was in 1957, decades before the Prats were convicted.
So the journey to send one or both of them to death row was
anticipated to be a potentially long and drawn out one.
The linchpin of why they qualified for such a harsh
sentence had to do with the fact that Brent had technically and drawn out one. The linchpin of why they qualified for such a harsh sentence
had to do with the fact that Brent had technically been
on duty as a peace officer when he was murdered.
So that was considered an aggravating factor,
which if affirmed by the court,
is what would trigger someone to be eligible
for capital punishment.
In late November, 1989, less than a year after the crime,
the judge who oversaw the trial
sentenced Joseph to a minimum of 110 years, so life in prison.
And James was sentenced to death, plus 85 years.
Brent's wife told the press that she was good with the outcome of the sentencing, and
several of the survivors of the home invasion shared the same sentiment.
Mark Polonek told reporter Mike McClain that he would be
satisfied with the judge's decision so long as the Pratt
brothers never got out of prison.
Both men appealed their convictions and sentences in
January 1990, with James specifically fighting to have
his punishment commuted to life in prison.
But by 1991, those efforts failed.
James then asked for a new trial, but that request was also denied.
He appealed again in 1993 and successfully got his death sentence vacated,
which resulted in him being resentenced to life in prison.
As you can imagine, that did not sit well with Brent Jacobson's loved ones,
including his wife and adult siblings who felt the court's decision was wrong.
Joseph Pratt also applied for post-conviction relief in 2000 and again in 2009, but was denied both times.
Fast forward a little more than a decade though to April 2021, and
things had changed yet again.
This time in a way few people saw coming.
That year, Idaho's Commission of Parole and pardons decided to grant the brothers early release.
At the time, James was 61 years old and Joseph was 59.
In total, they'd only served 32 years of their life sentences.
Angela, Brent's stepdaughter, told producers for Oxygen that the brothers being allowed to leave prison early was incredibly unfair to her and her family. She said quote, we have a
permanent sentence of not having Jake in our lives forever, end quote. In the wake
of Brent's murder a scholarship was created at the University of Idaho in
his name and the US Department of Agriculture posthumously honored him with
a Service Award for his heroic actions. Additionally, he was bestowed a Posthumous Medal of Honor
Award in 2011, and a Mountain Southeast of Sandpoint is named in his memory. The US Forest
Service also dedicated the Mineral Point Trail to him, and it's still around today.
At his funeral back in 1989, Brent's mother shared a short poem from Theodora Krober that
she believed appropriately embodied her son's legacy.
It's a beautiful stitching of words that I want to leave you all with as I close out
this episode.
It reads,
When I am dead, cry for me a little.
Think of me sometimes, but not too much.
It is not good for you to allow
your thoughts to dwell too long on the dead. Think of me now and again as I was in life,
at some moment which is pleasant to recall, but not for long. Leave me in peace as I shall
leave you too in peace while you live. Let your thoughts be with the living.
Park Predators is an AudioChuck production.
You can view a list of all the source material for this episode on our website
parkpredators.com. And you can also follow Park Predators on
Instagram at ParkPredators. So what do you think Chuck?
Do you approve?