PDA

View Full Version : Utah 'Mountain Man' gets 10 ½ years in prison



mick silver
9th June 2014, 11:54 AM
Utah 'Mountain Man' gets 10 ½ years in prisonhttp://l.yimg.com/os/152/2012/04/21/image001-png_162613.png (http://www.ap.org/) By KEN RITTER and BRADY McCOMBS 1 hour ago


0 shares




















Content preferences (http://profile.yahoo.com/y/settings/interests/)



Done



http://l3.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/yiyMXYLBiqwtkuLNzvD4NQ--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9ZmlsbDtoPTQyMTtweG9mZj01MDtweW 9mZj0wO3E9NzU7dz03NDk-/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/3c94d7518ac59516560f6a706700d2e2.jpg (http://news.yahoo.com/utah-mountain-man-gets-10-years-prison-170352955.html#)
.View photo

FILE - This April 2, 2013 file photo, provided by the Emery County Sheriff's Office shows detectives placing fugitive Troy James Knapp, center, into custody in the mountains outside of Ferron in central Utah. On Monday, June 9, 2014, in a courtroom in St. George, Utah, Troy James Knapp, known by many as the "Mountain Man," is set to finally face justice by agreeing to a package of plea deals that will bring an end his court case, and start the clock on a prison sentence expected to be at least 10 years. (AP Photo/Emery County Sheriff's Office, File)





ST. GEORGE, Utah (AP) — He eluded police for more than six years, ransacking cabins across a wide swath of Utah as he trekked hundreds of miles alone on his snowshoes with a rifle slung over his shoulder.



After authorities caught him last year, he continued his solitary ways in court as he fired his defense attorney and defiantly told a judge he would represent himself against a host of state and federal burglary and theft charges.
But on Monday in a courtroom in St. George, Troy James Knapp, known by many as the "Mountain Man," was sentenced to 10 years and six months in prison. Knapp agreed to a plea deal on federal weapons charges that stem from him firing shots at agents during his capture in April 2013.
Knapp, 46, will next go before a state judge Monday where he's scheduled to take plea deals from seven Utah counties where he is charged with burglary-related crimes. Details of the plea deals are not being disclosed, but he's charged with more than 40 burglary-related crimes dating back to 2009.
U.S. Assistant Attorney Matthew Bell said Knapp has been cooperating with authorities since agreeing to the plea deal this spring, helping them find 16 weapons he had stored away in four locations in four different counties. That included 13 handguns, two rifles and 1 one shotgun, Bell said.
Authorities say Knapp began a string of cabin burglaries across southern and central Utah in 2007.
Knapp is set to take individual plea deals for each county, but prosecutors in the seven counties have been working together to make sure everybody is on board with the package of deals, said Sanpete County Attorney Brody Keisel.
He's charged in Beaver, Emery, Garfield, Iron, Kane, Sanpete and Sevier counties.
If the deals go through as expected, it will signal the end of what could be the final chapter in the mysterious story of an unknown California fugitive who became a sensation in Utah as he raided cabins, stealing guns, whiskey and supplies.
Knapp was born in Saginaw, Michigan, and got into trouble with the law early. As a teenager, he was convicted of breaking and entering, passing bad checks and unlawful flight from authorities, according to court records. Knapp drifted across the country and ended up in prison in California for burglary. He fell off the radar in 2004 when he "went on the run" while on parole.
In 2007, southern Utah authorities began investigating a string of cabin burglaries in southern and central Utah they believed were tied to one person. It wasn't until early 2012 that they identified Knapp as the suspect from cabin surveillance photos and fingerprints lifted from a Jim Beam bottle in one cabin.
In one photo, he was wearing camouflage, a rifle was slung over his shoulder and he had purple-colored aluminum snowshoes on his feet.
Authorities say Knapp spent winters holed up in snowbound cabins, sleeping in the owners' beds, eating their food and listening to their AM radio for updates about the manhunt. In summer he retreated deep into the woods with a doomsday supply of guns, dehydrated foods, radios, batteries and high-end camping gear.
Knapp's signature clues were rumpled bed sheets and an empty bottle of whisky, authorities said. Sometimes he left notes taunting authorities, including one that warned a sheriff that he was "gonna put you in the ground!" Other times, he left thank you notes. In one break-in in Garfield County, police say Knapp cooked some beans and left a note in the cabin log that said "Thanks for the hospitality, Troy James the red head."
After years of being unable to catch him, authorities finally closed in on Knapp around Easter 2013 by using some of his own tactics. After tracking him by snowshoes for three days, dozens of officers converged on him in snowmobiles and a snowcat, flushing him out of the cabin. He fired several shots at officers and a helicopter, and tried to flee on snowshoes before being caught.
Since his arrest, prosecutors have been eager to tamp down the notion that Knapp was some sort of folk hero by insisting Knapp is nothing more than a criminal living off others for years.
___
McCombs reported from Salt Lake City.
Follow Ken Ritter at https://twitter.com/krttr and Brady McCombs at https://twitter.com/BradyMcCombs


Society & Culture
Crime & Justice



View Comments (32)

gunDriller
9th June 2014, 12:15 PM
he could be making $1000 a day teaching Prepping to Yuppie Preppers.

instead he's in jail.

what a waste.

Spectrism
9th June 2014, 12:39 PM
Seems that his idea of prepping is to break into others' cabins and steal their food.

Cebu_4_2
9th June 2014, 12:54 PM
Seems that his idea of prepping is to break into others' cabins and steal their food.

According to what they are saying...

Ponce
9th June 2014, 01:52 PM
Seems that his idea of prepping is to break into others' cabins and steal their food.

He was a survivalist taking from the prepper ........ a view of the future.

V

Twisted Titan
9th June 2014, 02:09 PM
I have little to no sympathy because he repeatedly stole from honest folk

He didnt have to do that and became some sort of twisted legend in his demented mind.


He deserve what he gets......probally more.

willie pete
9th June 2014, 03:10 PM
looks can be deceiving, but he looks as if his psychological compass may be off kilter, if he'd been living totally off the land it would've been a different story but he allegedly was stealing other peoples stash, that aint cool

Ponce
9th June 2014, 04:34 PM
I can see that many of you have been very pampered all your life....I'd rather be him than you in what is to come because I know that I will survive where you will be killed.......I am not talking about food or "things" but rather about everything, you will probably die because you don't have it.

V

Hitch
9th June 2014, 04:42 PM
I can see that many of you have been very pampered all your life....I'd rather be him than you in what is to come because I know that I will survive where you will be killed.......I am not talking about food or "things" but rather about everything, you will probably die because you don't have it.

V

Ponce, he survived by stealing from others. Yes, he survived but at the expense of honest folk. He couldn't survive on his own, he had to take from others.

Just surviving isn't the goal, it's surviving and being a good person at the same time, that's important.

Santa
9th June 2014, 05:29 PM
If all he did was steal some beans, drink some whiskey and sleep on beds in a few unoccupied snowbound cabins all those years, I'd say he did extremely well. A gentleman as far as outlaws go.

Neuro
11th June 2014, 01:56 AM
I thought the original charge was only for fishing without a license. Is the rest just manufactured reality?

Camp Bassfish
11th June 2014, 04:47 AM
Different "Mountain Man". This guy was raiding cabins and being a general menace to society.

Not a "Mountain Man" at all, but a low down thief who deserved far worse than the "3 hots and a cot" that he'll be enjoying on our dime for the next 10 years.

Twisted Titan
11th June 2014, 05:07 AM
If you came home to your stuff being rifeled through,used or taken you would have a much different opinion about this jackass

collector
11th June 2014, 06:59 AM
If he had lived off the land and merely used an occasional cabin to sleep in, leaving it just as he had found it while cleaning up after himself, there probably would never be any police reports filed and he'd never have been facing these charges. He was a user and as Bassfish said - a menace

Santa
11th June 2014, 07:21 AM
The guy was on the run from the cops for 6 fucking years, mostly in wilderness. He never harmed or threatened anyone in all those years. He didn't ransack. He didn't burn cabins down. He even left thank you notes. He was careful not to break into occupied homes. He had no one to help him or back him. Unlike cops, he obviously lived by principles, even in desperate straits.

Ponce is right.


I can see that many of you have been very pampered all your life....I'd rather be him than you in what is to come because I know that I will survive where you will be killed.......I am not talking about food or "things" but rather about everything, you will probably die because you don't have it.

collector
11th June 2014, 08:01 AM
http://www.salina.com/news/story/a0642-BC-US-RecluseCabinBurgl-1stLd-Writethru-04-11-1041-clone

The guy stole guns, camping gear, food, etc and buried them in various locations. He was storing preps that he stole from others - he deserves what he gets. I've had things stolen from me, preps that I worked and paid for - I have no sympathy for this guy whatsoever. He's lucky he wasn't shot by a guy who's cabin he was breaking into at the time.
I'd respect a guy a lot more if he hunted and traded his kill (or skills) for camping gear, guns, dehydrated food, whatever, then he might have actually had friends and other people to back him up

Santa
11th June 2014, 08:56 AM
http://www.salina.com/news/story/a0642-BC-US-RecluseCabinBurgl-1stLd-Writethru-04-11-1041-clone

The guy stole guns, camping gear, food, etc and buried them in various locations. He was storing preps that he stole from others - he deserves what he gets. I've had things stolen from me, preps that I worked and paid for - I have no sympathy for this guy whatsoever. He's lucky he wasn't shot by a guy who's cabin he was breaking into at the time.
I'd respect a guy a lot more if he hunted and traded his kill (or skills) for camping gear, guns, dehydrated food, whatever, then he might have actually had friends and other people to back him up

His options were limited. He had to avoid human contact because he was on the run from the feds. Alone. In the mountains. In the winter. Without having had the opportunity to prep. He survived. He has my respect.


Knapp spent his last three nights in a framed log cabin with a commanding view of forest roads leading to Ferron Reservoir, according to authorities.

Eugene Bartholomew, who owns the cabin, spoke of Knapp with something of reverence, even as he said the suspect left his place "a mess" and with a pungent odor. Bartholomew said Knapp drained a bottle of whisky during his stay, and the cabin owner plans to display the empty container on his mantle.

"I'm trying to get his autograph," said Bartholomew, who plans to name his cabin "Mountain Man Retreat." ''I want it on a picture of him for my wall."
- See more at: http://www.salina.com/news/story/a0642-BC-US-RecluseCabinBurgl-1stLd-Writethru-04-11-1041-clone#sthash.lqqzqa6x.dpuf

mick silver
11th June 2014, 09:02 AM
how many people die from him living off the food they left there that most likely would of had to be put in the trash can , plus why would anyone leave a gun at a place that they would not be at for some time , I know I don't nor do I leave ammo behind

madfranks
11th June 2014, 10:36 AM
how many people die from him living off the food they left there that most likely would of had to be put in the trash can , plus why would anyone leave a gun at a place that they would not be at for some time , I know I don't nor do I leave ammo behind

And what would you do if you were stocking your cabin for a vacation and when you arrive you see that all your stuff is gone? Wouldn't you be pissed?

mick silver
11th June 2014, 10:42 AM
mad I have three hunting cabin in the state I live in , when I leave food guns ammo go with me

hoarder
11th June 2014, 11:25 AM
looks can be deceiving, but he looks as if his psychological compass may be off kilter, if he'd been living totally off the land it would've been a different story but he allegedly was stealing other peoples stash, that aint coolThere are plenty of other pics of this guy on the net. It's seems pretty obvious the Sheriffs office picked the crazyest one they could find to release....maybe to enhance conviction probability.

Horn
11th June 2014, 12:08 PM
If all he did was steal some beans, drink some whiskey and sleep on beds in a few unoccupied snowbound cabins all those years, I'd say he did extremely well. A gentleman as far as outlaws go.

Shooting at federal authorities is the focus of proceedings.

misdemeanor b&e's have nothing at all to do with it the bulk of the sentence, or the search.

Santa
11th June 2014, 12:52 PM
Shooting at federal authorities is the focus of proceedings.

misdemeanor b&e's have nothing at all to do with it the bulk of the sentence, or the search.

Well then, I guess he's going to the Big House with fond memories of free beans, cheap whiskey and snowy nights.

collector
11th June 2014, 06:00 PM
Interesting write up here - the guy definitely has a story to tell
http://www.mensjournal.com/magazine/print-view/troy-knapp-a-ghost-in-the-backcountry-20130402 (http://www.mensjournal.com/magazine/print-view/troy-knapp-a-ghost-in-the-backcountry-20130402)
Troy Knapp, a Ghost in the Backcountry
Editor's Note: Just a few days before this story was due to hit news stands – and after months of reporting – writer Jacob Baynham (http://www.mensjournal.com/contributor/jacob-baynham) received a phone call from Sheriff Nathan Curtis saying that Troy Knapp had been captured outside of a cabin near Ferron Reservoir, Utah (http://www.ksl.com/index.php?sid=24632284&nid=148&title=mountain-man-captured-in-sanpete-county). Knapp was reported to have fired shots at a Department of Public Safety helicopter but was taken into custody without injury. This story from our May, 2013, issue recounts the seven-year manhunt that led to his arrest.

Dogman
11th June 2014, 06:13 PM
Mixed emotions here, he gave them a hell of a run.

But also he violated the sanctity of a bunch of peoples homes.

But to survive he probably needed to do so,

so we have had several rights human rights threads vs gov laws. Here ad Part of me gives him kudos for lasting as long as he did.

Then the other side, is he caused unasked damage to others and theft of property that maybe they worked their ass's off getting.

So have mixed feelings on this one.


My personal guide and live my life is do what you want as long as it causes no harm to others, that is my way of life.

Harm, has many meanings, emotional, physical, mental,

leave no tracks!

Other than the good you do for others that will be held in their hearts.


But my way of life is not the same as some here

Mixed bag for sure.