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Old 23rd April 2012, 09:12 PM   #1
Checkmite
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Gulf Coast
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Most Dangerous Dayhike

So you're hiking in a Utah forest and up ahead, you see what looks like a neat makeshift but elaborate shelter built out of sticks and logs:



Intrigued, you approach one of the two entrances to take a look inside. As you get close to the "door", you feel an unexpected resistance against the top of your shoe. Catching movement out of the corner of your eye, you turn just in time to see this heavy object swinging down from somewhere above, directly at your head:



Lights out.

Luckily, the first person to come across this deadly setup was a forest ranger who was a military vet and had some training in identifying dangerous devices and not, say, some tween who would've seen the cool-looking stick shelter and run headlong toward it without noticing anything.

Quote:
A deadly booby trap rigged along a popular Utah trail could have killed someone if they had tripped a ground wire set up to send a 20-pound, spiked boulder swinging into an unsuspecting hiker, authorities said Monday.

Another trap was designed to trip a passer-by into a bed of sharpened wooden stakes, authorities said.

Two men arrested over the weekend on suspicion of misdemeanor reckless endangerment told authorities the traps were intended for wildlife, but investigators didn't believe the story.

The suspects built a dead-wood shelter as a possible lure for hikers who could step inside only through the two booby-trapped entrances, Utah County sheriff's Sgt. Spencer Cannon said.

"This is a shelter put together by people, visited by people — anything that would be impacted by their device would have to be humans," Cannon said. "It took some time to build these traps. They took rope, heavy-duty fishing line, and they intended what the traps were going to do."

The structure was easy to see, Cannon said, but the booby traps could have been overlooked by everyone except a military-trained officer like James Schoeffler of the U.S. Forest Service, who was on a routine patrol along Big Springs Trail last week when he noticed the trip wires.

The U.S. Forest Service has not made Schoeffler available for an interview. Authorities said he disabled the traps after taking photos and video of the site.

...

Days after Schoeffler made the discovery, a tipster alerted authorities about comments on Facebook that mentioned the traps and the shelter. Detectives then tracked down the suspects, Cannon said.

Benjamin Steven Rutkowski, 19, of Orem and Kai Matthew Christensen, 21, of Provo were booked in the Utah County Jail on Saturday and released on bail.

Prosecutors believed the misdemeanor reckless endangerment allegations were the strongest claims they could pursue without anyone being injured. Charges have not yet been filed.
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