
One town, four victims, seven days of fear: The hunt for a man who gunned down locals at a bar in a small Montana town
For seven days, the quiet charm of Anaconda gave way to fear as the town's residents slept beside their guns at night and eyed their once peaceful, tree-lined neighborhoods that had become potential hiding places for a mass murderer on the run.
On August 1, Michael Paul Brown walked into The Owl Bar near his home in Anaconda and fatally shot Daniel Baillie, 59; Nancy Kelley, 64; David Leach, 70; and Tony Palm, 74, authorities said.
Brown had irrevocably scarred a beloved gathering spot, known for its cozy, neon-lit interior plastered with glowing beer logo signs and posters jeering with bawdy bar jokes and wisecracks.
'He knew everybody that was in that bar. I guarantee you that,' owner David Gwerder told The Associated Press. 'He didn't have any running dispute with any of them. I just think he snapped.'
It's still unclear whether Brown was targeting any of the victims or if he shot them randomly. Brown's niece, Clare Boyle, previously told CNN he struggled with his mental health during his time in the Army and was never the same after his service.
Upon fleeing The Owl Bar after the deadly shooting, Brown briefly went to his home before hiding in another structure down the street, authorities said Friday.
Security footage showed Brown barefoot and wearing only underwear as he left that structure, where he ditched his clothing and other personal items. He then stole a white Ford F-150 truck, authorities said.
'He was identified almost immediately when he got in that vehicle and took off,' Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen said.
The challenge was 'an almost identical vehicle pulled into the highway in front of him, and so law enforcement wasn't sure which white F-150 he was in,' Knudsen said.
It was still early morning when hospitals, day care centers and local businesses received a chilling emergency alert ordering them to lock down immediately.
'Once that happened, the news spread like wildfire,' local Randy Clark, a retired police officer, told CNN.
When Clark stepped outside his home, he was immediately engulfed by a massive dust cloud kicked up by speeding law enforcement vehicles.
For an entire week, the flashing blue and red lights of police vehicles cast eerie glows inside residents' homes, while helicopters and drones hummed relentlessly overhead.
Neighbors and businesses bolted their doors and watched anxiously from behind curtains as police swarmed the streets. Armed and on edge, every unfamiliar noise sparked dozens of false alarms.
Last Sunday morning, the house beside Clark's was crowded with SWAT vehicles when a young girl in the home awoke to a loud noise downstairs, triggering a false alarm.
'They responded to every call. They followed up on every tip. They spent hours climbing over these mountains looking for this criminal. They used every resource available to them to search for him,' Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte said about authorities' efforts to find Brown.
The grueling manhunt was unwavering, with 250 law enforcement personnel traversing challenging terrain in the western Montana wilderness. The dozens of agencies searching for Brown included the FBI, Anaconda Deer Lodge County Police, the Granite County Sheriff's Office and the Denver office of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Authorities locked down the Barker Lake area of the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest last weekend as local, state and federal agencies searched by land and air, the Montana Department of Justice said.
'The type of terrain, it's very challenging, so we have expanded our perimeters to look in different areas,' Montana Division of Criminal Investigation Administrator Lee Johnson said previously.
Anaconda resident Dan Haffey, who was a fire foreman for the Montana Division of Forestry, knows the area well. He told CNN his team would cut trails into Garrity Mountain for hikers.
'There's a thousand places to hide on that mountain,' Haffey said. 'I've been on forest fires, and in that drainage up there, and (there are) 5,000 acres. That mountain is gigantic.'
Investigators eventually found the truck Brown had stolen, but he 'was not located in or around the vehicle,' Johnson said at the time.
On Friday, after a weeklong manhunt, Brown was found armed around 2 p.m. local time about 5-and-a-half miles away from the shooting scene. He is now in the custody of Anaconda-Deer Lodge County authorities, according to Knudsen.
Authorities on Friday declined to comment on which charges will be filed against the suspect. CNN is working to determine whether Brown has retained an attorney.
Tips from the public were crucial in locating Brown, who was 'flushed out' and found in an area authorities had previously searched and cleared, Knudsen said.
On Thursday, there were about 130 personnel in the area where Brown was found, according to Knudsen.
'We think that was directly correlated to flushing him out today, getting him down into an area that we know we had searched before,' Knudsen said Friday. 'It's not someplace he'd been hiding.'
With the suspect in custody, authorities say they will now seek justice for the families of the victims.
Meanwhile, the community of Anaconda is cautiously moving toward a sense of normalcy.
Businesses have unlocked their doors again and locals have set aside their guns to find comfort in grieving together and supporting one another, Clark said. He added several restaurants are donating a portion of their sales to help support The Owl Bar.
'It's always terrible for the victims' families and friends to lose someone like that, in such a terrible way,' Clark said. 'I'm sure at The Owl Bar, every time somebody drives by or goes in, or the name of any of the victims comes up, it will just bring everything back up, but the whole saying is, 'time heals wounds.''
CNN's Dalia Faheid, Josh Campbell, Michelle Watson, Taylor Galgano, Jillian Sykes and Elizabeth Wolfe contributed to this report.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump wants to evict homeless from Washington and send them 'far from the capital'
By Bo Erickson and Nandita Bose WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump pledged on Sunday to evict homeless people from the nation's capital and jail criminals, despite Washington's mayor arguing there is no current spike in crime. "The Homeless have to move out, IMMEDIATELY. We will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital. The Criminals, you don't have to move out. We're going to put you in jail where you belong," Trump posted on the Truth Social platform. The White House declined to explain what legal authority Trump would use to evict people from Washington. The Republican president controls only federal land and buildings in the city. Trump is planning to hold a press conference on Monday to "stop violent crime in Washington, D.C." It was not clear whether he would announce more details about his eviction plan then. Trump's Truth Social post included pictures of tents and D.C. streets with some garbage on them. "I'm going to make our Capital safer and more beautiful than it ever was before," he said. According to the Community Partnership, an organization working to reduce homelessness in D.C., on any given night there are 3,782 single persons experiencing homelessness in the city of about 700,000 people. Most of the homeless individuals are in emergency shelters or transitional housing. About 800 are considered unsheltered or "on the street," the organization says. A White House official said on Friday that more federal law enforcement officers were being deployed in the city following a violent attack on a young Trump administration staffer that angered the president. The Democratic mayor of Washington, D.C., Muriel Bowser, said on Sunday the capital was "not experiencing a crime spike." "It is true that we had a terrible spike in crime in 2023, but this is not 2023," Bowser said on MSNBC's The Weekend. "We have spent over the last two years driving down violent crime in this city, driving it down to a 30-year low." The city's police department reports that violent crime in the first seven months of 2025 was down by 26% in D.C. compared with last year while overall crime was down about 7%. Bowser said Trump is "very aware" of the city's work with federal law enforcement after meeting with Trump several weeks ago in the Oval Office. The U.S. Congress has control of D.C.'s budget after the district was established in 1790 with land from neighboring Virginia and Maryland, but resident voters elect a mayor and city council. For Trump to take over the city, Congress likely would have to pass a law revoking the law that established local elected leadership, which Trump would have to sign. Bowser on Sunday noted the president's ability to call up the National Guard if he wanted, a tactic the administration used recently in Los Angeles after immigration protests over the objections of local officials.


Associated Press
23 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Police say 8 killed and 3 injured at a nightclub in Ecuador as violence surges
QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — A shooting at a nightclub in Ecuador on Sunday killed eight people and injured three others in the latest violent incident to hit the spiraling South American country, authorities said. The shooting took place in the rural area of Santa Lucía in the coastal province of Guayas, considered one of the country's most dangerous. Seven of the victims, who were between 20 and 40 years old, died at the club and the eighth one at a hospital, according to a police statement. Authorities said the heavily armed suspects arrived on motorcycles and in two vehicles. It wasn't immediately known what prompted the shooting, which came two days after gunmen attacked a boat near El Oro province along the country's southwest coast. Four people were killed in that incident and several others remain missing after suspects launched explosives at the boat. Dozens of people have been killed in recent months, most of them in four of Ecuador's coastal provinces: El Oro, Guayas, Manabí and Los Ríos. They all remain under a state of emergency. Authorities have blamed the wave of violence on disputes among organized crime groups linked to transnational drug cartels that have expanded their operations, especially in the Pacific region, where drugs are shipped to Central America, the United States and Europe. More than 4,600 people have been killed so far this year in the country of some 18 million inhabitants. Last year, nearly 7,000 killings were reported, down from more than 8,000 in 2023, a record number.


CBS News
23 minutes ago
- CBS News
North Dakota man drowns in Minnesota's Cass Lake, sheriff says
A North Dakota man drowned early Saturday evening in northern Minnesota, according to the Cass County Sheriff's Office. First responders were called to Cass Lake just before 6 p.m. after the 41-year-old victim, from Grafton, North Dakota, went into the water without a life jacket to try and fix an issue with a pontoon motor. "Juveniles on the boat attempted to throw the victim a life jacket and the boat began to drift in high winds," the sheriff's office said. "The boat was later intercepted by other boaters on the lake and the incident was reported to 911." The victim's body was found and recovered from the lake just before 8 p.m. The sheriff's office says the Ramsey County Medical Examiner's Office will release the victim's identity and official cause of death at a later time. Cass Lake is more than 200 miles northwest of Minneapolis.