Former US soldier suspected of killing 4 in Montana remains at large
[August 04, 2025]
By SAFIYAH RIDDLE
The former U.S. soldier suspected of killing four people at a Montana
bar was still at large early 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 (120
kilometers) 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.
A good neighbor
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.”
Everybody in town knows each other
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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Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen speaks to the media Sunday,
Aug. 3, 2025 in front of the Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Courthouse
in Anaconda, Mont., about the ongoing search for shooting suspect
Michael Brown. (Joseph Scheller/The Montana Standard via AP)

The suspected shooter's past
Investigators are considering all possible options for Brown's
whereabouts, the attorney general said. That includes searching the
woods where Brown hunted and camped while he was a kid. But Knudsen
noted that during peak tourist season in western Montana some law
enforcement officials would have to return to their local jurisdictions
for their regular responsibilities.
Brown served in the Army as an armor crewman from 2001 to 2005 and
deployed to Iraq from early 2004 until March 2005, said Lt. Col. Ruth
Castro, an Army spokesperson. Brown was in the Montana National Guard
from 2006 to March 2009, Castro said, and left military service at the
rank of sergeant.
Brown’s niece, Clare Boyle, told The Associated Press that her uncle has
struggled with mental illness for years, and she and other family
members repeatedly sought help.
“This isn’t just a drunk/high man going wild,” she said in a Facebook
message. “It’s a sick man who doesn’t know who he is sometimes and
frequently doesn’t know where or when he is either.”
Appeals to the public for help
Knudsen said on Sunday that Brown was known to local law enforcement
before the shooting. It was widely believed that he knew at least some
of the victims, given how close he lived to the bar.
Law enforcement released a photograph of Brown from surveillance footage
taken shortly after the fatal shootings. He appeared to be barefoot and
in minimal clothing.
But law enforcement now believes Brown ditched the vehicle he escaped in
and stole a different one that had camping gear, shoes and clothes in it
— leaving open the possibility that Brown is now clothed.

The last time that law enforcement saw Brown was on Friday afternoon,
but there was “some confusion” because there were multiple white
vehicles involved, Knudsen said.
There is a $7,500 reward for any information that leads to Brown's
capture.
“This is still Montana. Montanans know how to take care of themselves.
But please, if you have any sightings, call 911,” Knudsen said. ___
Riddle is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America
Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national
service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on
undercovered issues.
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