logo
Idaho firefighter sniper had been turned away by fire department, Army before deadly attacks

Idaho firefighter sniper had been turned away by fire department, Army before deadly attacks

New York Post23-07-2025
The man accused of fatally shooting two Idaho firefighters before killing himself last month had tried to join the fire department, and became angry when told he would need to go through training and testing.
Wess Roley also tried to join the Army twice — his father was an Army veteran — but was disqualified after failing to follow through on tasks and appointments, Kootenai County Sheriff Bob Norris said Tuesday at a press conference.
The new revelations offer a more complete picture of the 20-year-old's resentments. Officials also presented evidence suggesting the attack was premeditated — a goodbye letter to his father they found in his truck and drawings in his home that appear to show a mountain parking lot with a shotgun being fired and a person aiming a rifle at his chin.
6 Idaho firefighter sniper Wess Roley was rejected by both the fire department and the Army.
'Tomorrow, I shall go to battle,' Roley wrote to his father. 'If I survive, it would be with upmost dishonor. I bid thee farewell.' Next to his signature were two symbols that appear to be runes linked to Nazi ideology.
Roley used gas, lighters and flint to start a series of fires at Canfield Mountain on June 29 to instigate a response, then shot at firefighters who asked him to move his vehicle, Norris said. He shot at others from a tree before dying from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the sheriff said.
'A pure act of evil'
'This was a premeditated ambush, a pure act of evil against the people we look to for help,' Norris said.
Killed were Kootenai County Fire and Rescue Battalion Chief Frank Harwood, 42, and Coeur d'Alene Fire Department Battalion Chief John Morrison, 52. Coeur d'Alene Fire Engineer David Tysdal, 47, was hospitalized in critical condition.
6 Kootenai County Fire & Rescue Battalion Chief Frank Harwood fatally shot by Idaho sniper Wess Roley.
IAFF 7th District
Investigators hope to learn more from Roley's social media accounts, but it's clear that his frustrations were growing over time, the sheriff said.
Roley tried to become a soldier in Arizona in 2023 and again last year in Hayden, Idaho, 'but failed to follow through on tasks and appointments, eventually being disqualified by the U.S. Army,' Norris said.
Then, one month before the shootings, Roley went to a Coeur d'Alene fire station asking about becoming a firefighter, Norris said.
6 Roley tried to become a soldier in Arizona in 2023 and again last year in Hayden, Idaho.
Kootenai County Sheriff's Office
'He had the state of mind that he would be able to start that day,' Norris said. 'He was told there's a process — you have a written exam, and a physical agility and a background investigation and an oral interview. The contact became agitated and frustrated. He left there in a very frustrated and agitated state.'
Former classmate recalls shooter as aggressive
Beyond what the sheriff shared, little is known about Roley's motivation, but Associated Press interviews and court records reveal a troubled early home life and a disconnect from schoolmates, who saw him as an aggressive young man who liked to draw bombs and use firearms.
Roley lived with his mother, Heather Caldwell-Cuchiara, and stepfather in Phoenix, Arizona, before moving to northern Idaho to live with his father, Jason Roley, in 2024.
6 Screenshot of suspect Wess Roley's Instagram story is seen at the Kootenai County Sheriff's Office during a press conference Monday, June 30, 2025, in Hayden, Idaho.
Dieter Denen, who went to elementary, middle and high school with Roley, told the AP that Roley's aggression and 'racist' comments made classmates uncomfortable.
'He was really on edge a lot,' Denen said. Roley would say unkind or rude things to people of a different race, culture or religion, he said. 'You'd kind of go, 'what the heck — why would you say that — it's a little messed up to say that,' he said.
Roley got in trouble for drawing a swastika in a school book, and also liked to draw bombs, planes and 'military things,' Denen said. Roley also bragged about his time in Germany: 'He would always tell me, 'I'm a lot more German in every way compared to you.'
Denen said he couldn't believe it when a friend texted an article about the shootings.
6 Idaho shooter Wess Roley in an undated Facebook photo posted by his mother Heather Lynn Caldwell.
Facebook/Heather Lynn Caldwell
'It's just so shocking,' Denen said. 'With Wess, he was definitely different when we were younger but it's hard to think that anyone could ever do something like that.'
Mother got protection order against his father
Court records show his parents, Heather and Jason Roley, were married in San Bernardino, California, in 2008. Jason Roley served in the Army from 2007 to 2015, including two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan, and left the service as a staff sergeant, an Army spokesperson said.
The family lived in Grafenwöhr, Germany, home to a large U.S. Army base, from 2010 to 2015, when Wess Roley was 5 to 10 years old. Records show his mother filed for divorce after they moved to Phoenix and sought a protection order saying Jason Roley posed a threat to her and their son. Her petition said he was an alcoholic and had been arrested for assaulting her on Oct. 1, 2015.
'He was very intoxicated,' she wrote. 'He was crying inconsolably saying that he was going to commit suicide. Things escalated. He punched several holes in the walls, destroyed my cell phone, pushed me to the ground.'
Jason Roley texted her after his arrest saying he was going to kill himself, she wrote. 'Jason verbally threatened me by saying he would be waiting outside with a sniper rifle and burn the place down,' she wrote. 'He said the only thing stopping him from going through with it was going to prison.'
'They did not deserve this'
6 Battalion Chief John Morrison fatally shot by Idaho sniper Wess Roley.
City of Coeur d'Alene
The judge ordered him to stay away from his wife and son and surrender any firearms. 'I am not a danger to my son or anyone else,' Jason Roley responded. 'The plaintiff did not tell the truth in her statement.'
The judge apparently believed her after a hearing. His order cited an act of domestic violence and said he might do it again. The protection would continue for the mother, but not their minor child.
Three years later, Jason Roley applied for a marriage license, with Sara Peterson. Their social media pages say they're married and live in Priest River, Idaho, near Sandpoint, where Wess Roley had been living before he became homeless.
Email and phone messages seeking Jason Roley's comment were not returned. His father, Dale Roley, wrote on Facebook that he's the grandfather.
'I would like give my Condolence's to all those family members who were Unfortunately Victims of yesterdays Crimes,' Dale Roley wrote. 'Those good Brave Firefighters were just doing there Job they did not deserve this!'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A stranger told me I was sending my kids to ‘Nazi camp' — this shows how mainstream anti-Jew hate has become
A stranger told me I was sending my kids to ‘Nazi camp' — this shows how mainstream anti-Jew hate has become

New York Post

time6 hours ago

  • New York Post

A stranger told me I was sending my kids to ‘Nazi camp' — this shows how mainstream anti-Jew hate has become

My children go to a Zionist Jewish summer camp. It's the kind of place that instills pride in Jewish identity and love for Israel while giving kids the normal joys of camp: canoeing, hiking, and endless games of soccer. But on the last Friday before the session ended, the kids and staff experienced a scare that revealed just how fragile Jewish life in America has become. During a live-streamed ceremony, paragliders appeared over the campus. They swooped low, and panic rippled through the crowd. For most American campers, it was confusing. For the Israeli staff and campers, many of them children directly impacted by the October 7th terror attacks near Gaza, the sight was terrifying. Paragliders were how Hamas terrorists descended that morning to murder, rape, and kidnap. The sound of their motors and the image of their canopies burned into memory. 4 The cyber-attacker used their real name in the messages. bethanyshondark/X The camp had fundraised to bring dozens of these traumatized Israeli children to safety for the summer. For them, seeing paragliders overhead was not a quirky airshow, it was the beginning of another attack. Staff acted instantly. State police were called. The children were evacuated to a secure location on campus. The livestream was cut off after we watched the evacuation begin. Parents, myself included, went into panic mode, wondering if we were watching another massacre unfold in real time. Thankfully, the paragliders were not terrorists. It was a misguided stunt, not an attack. But the trauma was real. Jewish children, American and Israeli alike, relived October 7th that afternoon in the middle of a peaceful American summer camp. When I shared what happened online, my post went viral, with over 5 million views. Instead of compassion, what flooded in were thousands of hateful comments. Strangers mocked the idea that Jewish children could have PTSD. They sneered at traumatized kids as if they were actors in some propaganda campaign. And then I opened a direct message that made my stomach turn. A woman, using her real name, wrote: 'F— you and f— your kid who goes to Nazi summer camp! Free Palestine from you sick f—s!' After I called her out, she went on, 'You are literally indoctrinating your children with the idea that raping and murdering people for their land is not only okay but promised to you by god. Zionism is a disease that you are spreading to your children and one day you will be recognized as the supporter of Genocide that you are.' 4 Mandel decided to search up the person behind the messaged and exposed them to their workplace. bethanyshondark/X That message didn't come from a troll in a dark basement. Thirty seconds of searching showed me that Danielle Gordon of Denver is a white, middle-class, college-educated employee of Fidelity, one of the largest financial institutions in the country. Her LinkedIn profile describes her as 'dedicated to working in inclusive, respectful, and ethical places.' And yet here she was, spewing genocidal hate at Jewish children. I decided to expose her name for three reasons. First, to show just how mainstream this kind of hate has become. Danielle isn't some fringe extremist hiding behind an anonymous account. She's a professional at one of the most respected financial institutions in the country. She's a typical progressive parroting TikTok talking points about Jews, Zionism, and Israel. At one point she even lectured me that 'Zionism goes against your religion' — a laughable claim for anyone who has read a page of Jewish history. Her hatred isn't rare; it's disturbingly ordinary. And that's what makes it so dangerous. This strain of progressive antisemitism thrives side by side with self-aggrandizing claims of moral superiority. Second, accountability matters. If Danielle Gordon is representing Fidelity and a client mentions assets or travel plans tied to Israel, should that client trust their money in her hands? 4 Mandel found her LinkedIn profile, where she works at Fidelity. bethanyshondark/X These are not abstract concerns; they go to the heart of whether Jews can participate equally in American life without fear that professionals charged with safeguarding our futures secretly despise us. (In a statement to The Post, Fidelity responded on Tuesday: 'Fidelity does not tolerate hateful, harassing or discriminatory behavior of any kind. The individual no longer works at Fidelity.') And third, I am an October 8th Jew. October 7th shattered the illusion of safety. October 8th was the day after, the day we realized the world would excuse terror and that the hatred we always suspected was there was now fully in the open. I am done playing nice. If you want to make Jewish children relive their trauma, if you want to mock their PTSD and celebrate their fear, then don't expect to do so with anonymity and no consequences. For too long, Jews in America have been told to keep our heads down, not make waves, not 'provoke.' That strategy hasn't worked. The murders of Jews in Los Angeles, Detroit, Denver, and Washington, D.C., prove that. A Zionist Jewish summer camp is, in fact, a target. To pretend otherwise is delusion. 4 Mandel said that she exposed the name to show how this type of hate has become mainstream. bethanyshondark/X So here is my message: if you come at Jews, expect a fight. That's what being an October 8th Jew means. It means the days of pretending antisemitism is rare or fringe are over. It means no longer accepting excuses for those who dehumanize us. It means fighting back with every tool we have: our voices, our platforms, and our refusal to be silent. Get opinions and commentary from our columnists Subscribe to our daily Post Opinion newsletter! Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters Jewish children should be able to go to camp in America without fearing that paragliders overhead signal another massacre. Parents should not have to wonder if strangers online want their kids dead. And no professional should be able to boast about 'inclusivity' by day while preaching genocide against Jews on weekends without being held accountable. October 7th was the day of horror. October 8th was the day of reckoning. And we are still living in it. Bethany Mandel writes and podcasts at The Mom Wars.

Woman charged with threatening Trump's life
Woman charged with threatening Trump's life

The Hill

time11 hours ago

  • The Hill

Woman charged with threatening Trump's life

An Indiana woman accused of posting threatening messages about President Trump on social media is facing federal criminal charges after prosecutors say she admitted to Secret Service officers that she was set on 'killing' Trump to 'avenge' lives lost during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nathalie Rose Jones, 50, of Lafayette, Ind., was arrested during a protest event in Washington, D.C., on Saturday and faces charges of threats against the president, as well as transmitting threats across state lines, court documents show. Jones was already on the Secret Service's radar because of a series of posts she had made on Instagram and Facebook before she was interviewed and arrested in D.C., according to court records. In one Facebook post dated Aug. 6 and included in the court filing, Jones allegedly wrote that she 'literally told FBI in five states today that I am willing to sacrificially kill this POTUS by disemboweling him and cutting out his trachea.' According to a court filing, Jones agreed to speak with law enforcement on Friday about the messages she had posted online. Authorities said she told them that she believed Trump was a 'terrorist' and 'Nazi,' who she would kill at 'the compound' if necessary. Jones also allegedly told officers that she had access to a 'bladed object' to use to 'carry out her mission of killing' the president in retaliation for the pandemic death toll, which she attributed to Trump and his previous administration. Jones was tracked down in the District of Columbia the following day and confirmed her previous statements but said she no longer wanted to harm the president, records show. 'Threatening the life of the President is one of the most serious crimes and one that will be met with swift and unwavering prosecution,' U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro said in a news release. 'Make no mistake — justice will be served.' Trump has faced multiple assassination threats, and he survived a shooting during a campaign rally in July 2024 when a bullet grazed his ear. The Hill's sister station NewsNation interviewed Jones during a protest in D.C. before her arrest Saturday. She told the station that she believed Trump's policies cost lives by undermining vaccines and health care needs of the vulnerable. 'This regime has to go, the whole administration,' she said. She also addressed Trump's recent federal takeover of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) and deployment of D.C.'s National Guard to address crime. 'You do not deploy the military against the American people,' Jones told NewsNation. 'We will not be suppressed. We will not exist in this authoritarian regime. We will not accept fascism.'

Secret Service arrests Lafayette woman on charges she threatened to kill the president
Secret Service arrests Lafayette woman on charges she threatened to kill the president

Indianapolis Star

time11 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Secret Service arrests Lafayette woman on charges she threatened to kill the president

This article has been updated to add information. WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Secret Service arrested Lafayette resident Nathalie Rose Jones on Saturday on charges she threatened to kill President Donald Trump on her social media platforms. U.S. District Court documents charge Jones, 50, who most recently was living in New York City, threatened to kill, kidnap and inflict bodily harm on Trump, according to a news release from federal officials published Monday. Secret Service agents interviewed Jones in New York on Friday, during which Jones allegedly called the president a terrorist and a Nazi and said if she had the opportunity, she would take the president's life and would kill him at "the compound," according to the U.S. attorney's office news release. On Saturday, Jones traveled to Washington, D.C., to participate in an protest that passed near the White House. Jones' Facebook posts from Saturday include photos of some of the protests. After the protest, U.S. Secret Service agents interviewed Jones a second time. She admitted to threatening the president the day before but told agents she did not have any present desires to harm him, according to the news release. Agents then arrested her, according to the U.S. attorney's office. "Threatening the life of the president is one of the most serious crimes and one that will be met with swift and unwavering prosecution," U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said in the news release. "Make no mistake — justice will be served." Jones made threats on Instagram and Facebook between Aug. 2 through Aug. 15, according to the U.S. attorney's office. According to her website marking her writing, Jones was born and raised in Rensselaer. She graduated from Indiana Academy for Science, Mathematics and Humanities on the Ball State University campus in Muncie. She then attended Indiana University but quit and joined the Army Reserves. After leaving the Reserves, she attended Purdue University, where she graduated in 2002 with a bachelor's degree in pharmacy, according to her website. A Purdue spokesperson has not confirmed that information. Her writings can be found at her website, However, she charges a fee of $1,776 to access her work. On a video Jones posted on her Facebook page, apparently on May 24, 2021 — World Schizophrenia Day — she discussed having mental health problems. "I am someone who identifies as schizophrenic," Jones said as she talks about celebrating the day. "What that means for me is: I think I'm famous, and let's get there." She admits to experiencing an altered sense of self and having disorganized thoughts. "Whatever this disease is I have, it's fine," she said on the 4-year-old video. "I'm not going to hurt anybody."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store