
U.S. war veteran and survivalist searched for info on moving to Canada before killing daughters, investigators say
This undated photo provided by the Wenatchee Police Department shows Travis Caleb Decker who the police are asking the public for help in locating the Washington state father who is wanted for murder after his three young daughters were reported missing and then found dead. (Wenatchee Police Department via AP)
Google searches and blood evidence are the latest tools being used in the manhunt for a former active duty soldier accused of murdering his own children, with authorities in Washington state advising residents to 'secure your homes and vehicles.'
The U.S. Marshals Service is helping search for Travis Decker, 32, who hasn't been seen since May 30. His three daughters – all under age 10 – were found June 2, suffocated at an isolated, abandoned campsite east of Seattle.
Since then, an intense manhunt over hundreds of square miles has unfolded, the Chelan County Sheriff's Office says.
The father is charged with the aggravated murder and kidnapping of the Decker sisters: Olivia, 5, Evelyn, 8, and Paityn, 9. With federal agents now involved in the search for him, Decker also faces a federal charge of Unlawful Flight to Avoid Prosecution. A reward of up to US$20,000 is offered for information leading to his arrest.
Decker's truck, his dog and 'many of the suspect's personal items' were found about 75 yards from the girls' bodies, the sheriff's office has said. Some blood on the truck belonged to a human male, while other blood was not human, it said, citing testing. The dog was given to a local humane society, the sheriff's office said; the welfare agency won't 'release information about any animals in custody involved in an active case.'
Gov. Bob Ferguson has authorized emergency funding so National Guard helicopters can help in the search for Decker.
The rugged terrain of the Cascades – along with Decker's own survivalist history – are proving challenging for law enforcement agents trying to catch up to him.
Suspect had survival training and an interest in Canada, court documents say
Decker, a veteran of the war in Afghanistan, 'frequently engaged in hiking, camping, survival skill practice, hunting and even lived off the grid in the backwoods for approximately 2.5 months on one occasion,' US Marshal Keegan Stanley said in an affidavit.
Four days before his disappearance, Decker made several Google searches related to finding a job in Canada, as well as 'how does a person move to canada,' Stanley said.
Decker's truck and the children's remains were found less than a dozen miles from the Pacific Crest Trail, a 2,650-mile path that runs all the way to the Canadian border. From the area closest to Decker's campsite, it is about a 200-mile hike to Canada.
Searchers with the Chelan County Sheriff's Office spent several days looking for Decker in the area around his campsite, with recreation areas around the Icicle River temporarily closed.
Late Monday night, the sheriff's office said it had narrowed the search to the Ingalls Creek area west of Wenatchee, the county's largest city and about 15 miles southeast of the campsite across rough terrain.
'During any criminal investigation, including this one, there is law enforcement sensitive information that is not shared with the public in order to protect the integrity of the investigation,' the sheriff's office said. 'We appreciate the public's patience, understanding and cooperation during this complex and emotional investigation.'
Decker had mental health issues, ex-wife says
Decker has not been seen since he picked up the children May 30 from their mother for a scheduled, three-hour visit, his ex-wife said, according to a state court affidavit. Although the exchange 'occurred without issues,' Whitney Decker later said he 'was quieter than usual.'
She advised investigators Travis Decker had been diagnosed a few years ago with borderline personality disorder, which the Cleveland Clinic describes as involving 'extreme mood fluctuations, instability in interpersonal relationships and impulsivity.'
Travis Decker had served in the US Army for eight years, an Army spokesperson said. He is in the Washington National Guard, facing discipline for missing required drills, a Guard spokesperson said. CNN has reached out to the Department of Veterans Affairs about whether Decker has sought treatment for mental illness through its facilities.
Decker had refused to sign his and Whitney's most recent parenting agreement, which required him to seek mental health treatment and anger management, she told Wenatchee Police. He was homeless at the time of his disappearance, she said, living in motels and campgrounds.
'Living every mother's worst nightmare'
Whitney Decker called police after her ex-husband failed to show up with their daughters as planned at 8 p.m. on May 30. The custody agreement does not allow Travis Decker to keep the children overnight.
The children were discovered three days later with plastic bags over their heads, their wrists tied. The cause of death was suffocation, the medical examiner said.
'Whitney is living every mother's worst nightmare,' family friend Amy Edwards said in a statement released by Whitney Decker's attorney. 'The hole in her heart is immeasurable. There are no words that can capture the weight of this loss.'
Andy Rose, CNN
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
Protests over immigration raids spread across the U.S. with more planned into the weekend
Protests over federal immigration enforcement raids and President Donald Trump's move to mobilize the National Guard and Marines in Los Angeles are spreading nationwide and are expected to continue into the weekend. While many demonstrations against the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency have been peaceful, with marchers chanting slogans and carrying signs, others have led to clashes with police, hundreds of arrests and the use of chemical irritants to disperse crowds. In Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott posted on social media that an unspecified number of National Guard troops 'will be deployed to locations across the state to ensure peace & order.' Los Angeles-area mayors demand that Trump administration stop stepped-up immigration raids Activists say they will hold even larger demonstrations in the coming days, with 'No Kings' events across the country on Saturday to coincide with Trump's planned military parade in Washington, D.C. The Trump administration said immigration raids and deportations will continue regardless. A look at some protests across the country: New York City Police detained more than 80 people during protests in lower Manhattan's Foley Square on Tuesday evening and early Wednesday. Protesters shouted and waved signs that included 'ICE out of NYC' as they rallied near an ICE facility and federal courthouses. Police estimated some 2,500 people participated. Some protesters jumped over metal barricades and clashed with officers who wrestled them to the ground. Video shows demonstrators throwing items at law enforcement vehicles. Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said most of the demonstrators were peaceful and that just a few caused the disorder that required police intervention. 'We want to maintain everyone's right to protest peacefully in this city and in this country, but we will not tolerate chaos and disorder or violence,' Tisch said Wednesday morning during an appearance on Fox 5 New York. Police said they took 86 people into custody, including 52 who were released with criminal court summonses for minor crimes and 34 who were charged with assault, resisting arrest and other crimes. San Antonio More than 400 people gathered outside of city hall Wednesday evening for an anti-ICE demonstration, according to local authorities. The protest was largely peaceful, with many blasting music and some handing out water. Nearby streets were closed off as law enforcement officers watched from hundreds of feet away. Dozens walked there from the historic Alamo mission after police closed off the area before the protest began. San Antonio Police Chief William McManus encouraged peaceful demonstration but said his officers would respond if 'it turns violent.' Officers with the Texas Public Safety Department said the Texas National Guard was present at the protest. Members were not seen standing with law enforcement officers in front of a small crowd of demonstrators. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott declined to say how many soldiers would be sent or how, only that they would be deployed in 'strategic locations where they can provide the most robust response' necessary. He did not say whether he or the president mobilized them. 'There are others outside of this room who would like to know that. And I'm not going to tell them,' Abbott said. 'We want to make sure that what has happened in California does not happen in Texas.' Mayor Ron Nirenberg said he did not ask the governor to deploy the National Guard troops and officials said they did not know how many troops were being sent, where they would be stationed or what they would do. Opinion: Donald Trump campaigned on eroding democracy. Now, he's just fulfilling his promises 'I want to acknowledge the anger and frustration that's out there with the federal government's crude interpretations of immigration law and cruel approach to human rights,' Nirenberg said. 'Exercise your right to free speech, but I urge you to keep it lawful and peaceful.' Philadelphia About 150 protesters gathered outside the Federal Detention Center on Tuesday afternoon and marched to ICE headquarters then back to the detention center. Police ordered a group marching along a major road to disperse and when they ignored the orders officers arrested 15 of them. Several officers used force during the arrests and their conduct will be reviewed, police said, without detailing what kind of force was used. Two officers suffered minor injuries. San Francisco About 200 protesters gathered outside the San Francisco Immigration Court on Tuesday after activists said several people were arrested there. Protests in the city swelled to several thousand demonstrators Sunday and Monday, and more than 150 people were arrested after some vandalized buildings and damaged cars, police vehicles and buses. Police said two officers suffered non-life threatening injuries. Seattle About 50 people gathered outside the immigration court in downtown Tuesday, chanting with drums and holding up signs that said, 'Free Them All; Abolish ICE' and 'No to Deportations.' Protesters blocked building entrances until police arrived. Mathieu Chabaud, with Students for a Democratic Society at the University of Washington, said they were there in solidarity with the Los Angeles protesters, 'and to show that we're opposed to ICE in our community.' Legal advocates who normally attend the immigration court hearings as observers and to provide support to immigrants were not allowed inside. Security guards also turned journalists away from the usually public hearings. Chicago Police said 17 people were arrested at a protest that jammed a downtown plaza and took over surrounding streets Tuesday evening. Some of those arrested were accused of vandalism, and four were charged with felonies including aggravated battery against an officer of the peace. Also Tuesday, a 66-year-old woman was treated for a fractured arm after being struck by a car. Video showed the vehicle speeding along a road filled with protesters. No other injuries were reported. Denver A group of protesters gathered before the Colorado state capitol, creating a sea of cardboard signs, one exhorting: 'Show your faces. ICE cowards.' The group then split in half, with hundreds chanting and marching down two thoroughfares and crowding out traffic. Police ordered them to disperse. Officers used smoke and pepper balls to control the crowd and 17 people were arrested, Denver police said Wednesday.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
‘Live big for Lionel': Parents celebrate spirit of 10-year-old boy killed in B.C. boating tragedy
Parents are mourning the shocking and sudden death of their youngest child, who they say was the 'joy of the family.'

Globe and Mail
3 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Still no evidence that missing Nova Scotia children were kidnapped, RCMP say
After receiving hundreds of tips, analyzing hours of video footage and seizing electronic devices, the Nova Scotia RCMP insist there's still no evidence that two young children who disappeared from the rural hamlet of Lansdowne nearly six weeks ago were kidnapped. The Mounties in a statement Wednesday described their investigation into the mysterious case as tenacious and intensive. They said they were getting help from the RCMP-run National Centre for Missing Persons and Unidentified Remains, as well as provincial and municipal police agencies from Nova Scotia and other parts of Canada. But despite suggestions from the children's stepfather that someone may have abducted them, police have found nothing to suggest six-year-old Lilly and four-year-old Jack Sullivan were taken from their home. 'There is no evidence the children were abducted, however, investigators are exploring all possibilities,' RCMP spokesperson Cindy Bayers said during an interview Wednesday. The RCMP said in their latest statement that more than 11 units of the national police force are engaged in the investigation and that they're using every in-house tool and resource, including digital forensics, truth verification and behavioral sciences units, legal support and forensic analysis. A national charity, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, has also been offering support to the children's families and their school. So far, police have been granted seven judicial authorizations to seize devices and materials that they believe may help their investigation, and more applications are expected, Ms. Bayers said. She declined to specify what the devices or the materials are. She added there have been no confirmed or substantiated sightings of the children since they were reported missing around 10 a.m. on May 2. Two Nova Scotia children are missing. Here's a timeline of key events since the siblings vanished The children were last seen in public on May 1, getting groceries with their stepfather, Daniel Martell, in the nearby town of New Glasgow. Mr. Martell has said he and the family spent the evening at the mobile home while he worked on the fence at the back of the property. His mother, who owns the mobile home, resides on the property in a camper. The next morning, the children's mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, marked the children absent from school at 6:17 a.m., Mr. Martell said. Roughly four hours later, Ms. Brooks-Murray called 911 and reported Lilly and Jack missing. Both she and Mr. Martell have said they were dozing in bed and awoke to find the children gone. They assumed the kids put on their boots, went out the back door and escaped the wood and chicken wire fence that surrounds the back yard of the home, he told The Globe and Mail. Ms. Brooks-Murray left the home the following day with the couple's one-year-old daughter, cut off contact with Mr. Martell and later changed her Facebook status to single. Search and rescue teams pored over the area for six days, traversing thick woods, brush, swamps and steep terrain, returning twice more to search areas that major crime investigators had identified as worth re-examining. Police say they've extensively searched inside the family's mobile home, the property and outbuildings as well as nearby septic systems, wells and culverts. Four mineshafts in the Lansdowne Station area have also been searched, Ms. Bayers said Wednesday. 'We're working to identify and locate any others,' she added. Lansdowne Station is a historical copper mining area with a labyrinth of old shafts and tunnels. In 2002, the body of a man who had been missing for 19 years was discovered by amateur mineral explorers inside an old copper mine, located on private property in the area, according to a local news story. The remains of 39-year-old Alex Penney, extracted by a team of RCMP officers, were later identified through DNA analysis and remains an unsolved homicide. In the case of Lilly and Jack Sullivan, the Mounties said they had collected hundreds of hours of video from home and business security cameras in the areas surrounding Lansdowne Station. Police say they've received 488 tips, and formally interviewed 54 people, some of whom took polygraph tests. Mr. Martell has said he volunteered to do one recently and that his results were favourable. He recently told The Globe that he's been interviewed by a homicide detective, providing as many details as possible, and suggested other people he believes police should interview. 'I just continue to do media and get the word out for the kids, keep it alive and keep it relevant so we can get as many tips as possible,' he said in late May. Cpl. Sandy Matharu, who is leading the investigation for the Northeast Nova RCMP Major Crime Unit, said in a statement Wednesday that police are accessing, evaluating and analyzing a 'significant volume of information from a variety of sources.' The statement adds: 'We're committed to doing what is necessary to locate Lilly and Jack and advance the investigation, which may take longer than we all hoped.'