Montana bar shooting suspect is captured, ending weeklong search
[August 09, 2025]
By HANNAH SCHOENBAUM
A man suspected in a shooting at a Montana bar that left four people
dead was captured Friday just a few miles from where the shooting
happened after hundreds of law enforcement officers spent the past week
scouring nearby mountainsides, authorities said.
Michael Paul Brown, 45, was taken into custody around 2 p.m. near the
area where authorities had focused their search in the days following
the Aug. 1 shooting at The Owl Bar in Anaconda, about 100 miles (190
kilometers) from Missoula.
Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen said during a news conference
that about 130 law enforcement officers made a hard push Thursday after
getting tips that helped verify they were looking in the right area.
“It’s not someplace he’d been hiding. He was flushed out,” Knudsen said.
Gov. Greg Gianforte first confirmed Brown’s capture on social media
Friday afternoon, saying it was the result of what he called a
“Herculean effort” from law enforcement officers across the state.
The community finally would be able to sleep tonight, Anaconda-Deer
Valley County Attorney Morgan Smith said, adding that the case is just
the beginning for prosecutors who will be seeking to charge Brown with
the killings.
It was not immediately clear if Brown had legal representation. Email
and phone messages were left Friday with the Montana public defender’s
office.
State authorities have not said what sparked last week’s shooting, which
left a female bartender and three male patrons dead. The victims were
identified as Nancy Lauretta Kelley, 64; Daniel Edwin Baillie, 59; David
Allen Leach, 70; and Tony Wayne Palm, 74.
Brown’s niece, Clare Boyle, said Kelley worked previously as an oncology
nurse and was a close family friend who helped Brown’s mother when she
was sick.
Bar owners from around the state have pledged to donate a portion of
sales to a fund for each of the victims’ families.
The shooting rattled the tight-knit town of about 9,000 people and
prompted the closure of a 22-square-mile (57-square-kilometer) stretch
of forest as authorities searched for Brown. He had fled from the
shooting in a white pickup that he later ditched. Authorities say he
later stole another white vehicle stocked with clothes, shoes and
camping gear. Earlier in the week, Knudsen had said it didn’t appear
that Brown had broken into any homes in the area for food or additional
supplies.

Lee Johnson, administrator of the Montana Division of Criminal
Investigation, said search teams found Brown at a structure near The
Ranch Bar and that he looked to be “in pretty good shape, physically.”
He was communicative and able to identify himself, Johnson said. Brown
was taken to a hospital for treatment and was medically cleared earlier
Friday.
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Police tape surrounds The Owl Bar in of Anaconda, Mont., on Friday,
Aug. 1, 2025, following a fatal shooting. (Joseph Scheller/The
Montana Standard via AP)

Eric Hempstead, who owns The Ranch Bar, about 5 miles (8 kilometers)
west of The Owl Bar, described an intense law enforcement presence
in the densely wooded area over the last couple of days that
involved search dogs and drones.
“The guy was never going to make it out in the open,” he said,
noting that he and his neighbors were armed and ready to protect
themselves.
Brown, who lived next door to The Owl Bar in Anaconda, served in the
Army as an armor crewman from 2001 to 2005 and deployed to Iraq from
early 2004 until March 2005. He also was in the Montana National
Guard from 2006 to 2009.
Boyle told The Associated Press that her uncle has struggled with
mental illness for years, and she and other family members
repeatedly sought help for him.
Before Brown’s father died in 2015, Boyle said Brown was “a good,
loving uncle." Then, she and other family members noticed a slip in
his mental state. Brown began experiencing delusions and often did
not know who, when or where he was. He was an avid hunter and kept
guns in his home.
Family members had requested wellness checks when they believed he
was becoming a danger to himself, she said. Boyle said Brown would
tell authorities he was fine.
The Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Law Enforcement Department did not
respond this week to several email and phone messages requesting
records of the wellness checks Boyle said they helped conduct on
Brown in the years leading up to the shooting.
At the news conference, Knudsen said officials had no comment on
whether police had performed wellness checks.
Montana is not among the states that have red flag laws allowing
families to formally petition for guns to be removed from the homes
of people who are deemed a danger to themselves or others. The state
Legislature passed a bill this year banning local governments from
enacting their own red flag gun laws. The governor signed it into
law in May.
___
Associated Press journalist Thomas Peipert in Denver contributed to
this report.
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