
ANACONDA, Mont. (AP) – A former U.S. soldier suspected of killing four people at a Montana bar was still at large Sunday and may be armed after escaping in a stolen vehicle containing clothes and camping gear, officials said.
Authorities believe 45-year-old Michael Paul Brown killed four people on Friday morning at The Owl Bar in Anaconda, Montana, about 75 miles southeast of Missoula in a valley hemmed in by mountains.
Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen said at a news conference Sunday that Brown committed the shooting with a rifle that law enforcement believes was his personal weapon. The victims ranged in age from 59 to 74 and were a female bartender and three male patrons.
Knudsen warned residents in the town of just over 9,000 people that Brown, who lived next door to the bar where he was a regular, could come back to the area.
“This is an unstable individual who walked in and murdered four people in cold blood for no reason whatsoever. So there absolutely is concern for the public,” Knudsen said.
The four victims were identified on Sunday morning as Daniel Edwin Baillie, 59, Nancy Lauretta Kelley, 64, David Allen Leach, 70, and Tony Wayne Palm, 74. All four lived in Anaconda.
Robert Wyatt, 70, said he was neighbors with Leach at a public housing complex for elderly people and people with disabilities.
“Everybody is nervous” since Friday, Wyatt said.
Leach was deaf and kept mostly to himself, Wyatt said, and he only recalls Leach having a family visit once almost a year ago. But Leach was always happy to help his neighbors with chores like moving furniture.
“If you needed help, Dave would help,” Wyatt said. “He was a good neighbor.”
Numerous public events were canceled over the weekend as the search entered its third day, according to local Facebook pages. As law enforcement scours the wild terrain, the woods southwest of Anaconda have been closed to the public by the National Forest System.
David Jabarek, 70, said that a mass shooting in a place as small as Anaconda is baffling to many. He said that he regularly saw both the shooter and the victims over the course of the 20 years that he has lived in Anaconda.
“We only have 9,000 people, so it’s like, what the hell just happened? Everybody knows everybody here,” he said.
Jabarek was headed to Owl Bar less than 30 minutes before the shooting happened, at around 10:15 a.m. On an impulse, he went to run an errand nearby instead. When he came back to the area, he saw the bar was surrounded by police.
“If I’d have been in there when I was supposed to be, you wouldn’t be talking to me. Somebody be talking to you about me,” he said.
The close call is now keeping Jabarek up at night. But he said that he isn’t afraid of the prospect of Brown returning.
“Everybody around here has two dozen firearms in their house, and right now they’re within hands reach,” Jabarek said.
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