Miami Herald

Deaths of dog walker, 83, and resident of a remote cabin are possibly tied to escaped Idaho inmate

- BY GENE JOHNSON AND MARK THIESSEN Associated Press

Authoritie­s said Friday they believe the deaths of an 83-year-old man who was walking his dogs and a 72-year-old man who lived in a remote cabin are connected to the escape of an Idaho white supremacis­t prison gang member and an accomplice after a Boise hospital ambush.

The escaped prisoner, Skylar Meade, and the accomplice, a recently released inmate named Nicholas Umphenour — both members of the Aryan Knights gang — were arrested in Twin Falls, Idaho, on Thursday afternoon.

Their arrests came 36 hours after Umphenour shot and wounded two Idaho correction­s officers while they were preparing to return Meade to prison from a hospital, police said.

Investigat­ors said Thursday that while on the run, Meade and Umphenour may have been responsibl­e for the deaths of two men, one in Nez Perce County and the other in Clearwater County, both in northern Idaho, about seven hours away from where they were arrested.

Coroners on Friday identified the victim in Nez Perce County as James L. Mauney, 83, of Juliaetta, who was reported missing on Wednesday when he left home in his silver Chrysler Pacifica minivan to take his two dogs — a white Jack Russell terrier and a brown Chesapeake Bay retriever — to a walking path.

“He’s my everything,” said his wife, Liliia Mauney, her voice cracking.

Idaho State Police returned the dogs to the family. One, Leo, “really misses him, he cries and goes out looking in the yard, looking for him,” Liliia Mauney said.

The victim in Clearwater County was Gerald Don Henderson, 72, who was found dead outside his remote cabin near Orofino.

“I can’t understand the senseless murder of this beautiful man,” Henderson’s partner, Ron Thompson, told The Associated Press on Friday. “Such a senseless, senseless thing to do.”

Thompson said he and Henderson met Umphenour about a decade ago through another “neighbor kid” they had taken in. Umphenour, who was then in his late teens, was not getting along with his father, Thompson said, and he stayed at the cabin with Henderson and Thompson for about a month.

Living with Umphenour was frightenin­g, Thompson said, because he “would always talk about shooting people.” The couple eventually kicked him out.

Thompson and Henderson met through a dating site in 2006 and had been life partners since, though Thompson moved out of the cabin in 2015 and resettled in Seattle because he grew tired of the isolated area. Henderson, who was 17 years older than Thompson, had difficulty sharing publicly that they were a couple in conservati­ve Idaho, and the two never married.

“It was not unknown that we were a couple, but we just never talked about it,” he said.

They dreamed of moving back in together, he said.

About a month ago, Umphenour — fresh out of prison, where he served time on theft and gun conviction­s — trudged through deep snow to spend an hour at the cabin with Henderson, drinking coffee and talking. Henderson felt uneasy about the visit and wasn’t sure why Umphenour had come, Thompson said.

On Wednesday, when

Thompson learned that Umphenour had been linked to Meade’s escape from the hospital, he grew worried and called the sheriff’s office to request that deputies check in on Henderson.

Police found him dead outside his home, where they also found what may have been the escaped prisoner’s shackles, Clearwater County Coroner Dennis Fuller said on Friday.

Fuller described Thompson as “a kindly old man who took in some ne’er-do-well guys and tried to help them.”

Mauney’s stolen minivan was found at a home in Twin Falls on Thursday, and as police secured the area, Meade and Umphenour tried to flee in different vehicles but were arrested, Idaho State Police said.

They made initial court appearance­s Friday, along with a woman who drove one of the two vehicles they were traveling in when they were arrested. Meade and Umphenour were being held on $2 million bond.

The woman, identified as Tonia Huber, was charged with harboring a fugitive, eluding police and drug possession. Idaho Fifth Judicial District Judge Ben Harmer set her bail at $500,000 after a prosecutor said she had driven 100 mph (161 kmh) through neighborho­ods as she tried to evade police.

None of the three entered pleas.

Meade, 31, was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2017 for shooting at a sheriff’s sergeant during a high-speed chase. Umphenour was released from the same prison — the Idaho Maximum Security Institutio­n in Kuna, south of Boise — in January. The two had at times been housed together and had mutual friends in and out of prison, officials said.

The attack on the correction­s officers came just after 2 a.m. Wednesday in the ambulance bay of

Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center, as they were preparing to return Meade to the prison. He had been brought to the hospital earlier in the night because he injured himself, officials said.

After the ambush, one officer shot by Umphenour was in critical but stable condition, police said, while the second wounded officer had serious but non-life-threatenin­g injuries.

A third correction­s officer also sustained nonlife-threatenin­g injuries when a responding police officer — mistakenly believing the shooter was still in the emergency room and seeing an armed person near the entrance — opened fire.

Correction Director Josh Tewalt said Thursday one guard had been released from the hospital, and the conditions of the other two are stable and improving.

The department is reviewing its policies and practices in light of the escape, he said. The attack came amid a wave of gun violence at hospitals and medical centers, which have struggled to adapt to the rise of threats.

“We’re channeling every resource we have to trying to understand exactly how they went about planning it,” Tewalt said.

Recently, Meade had been held in solitary confinemen­t because officials deemed him a security risk.

The Aryan Knights prison gang formed in the mid-1990s in Idaho. In court documents federal prosecutor­s described it as a “scourge” within the state’s prison system.

“The hate-fueled gang engages in many types of criminal activity and casts shadows of intimidati­on, addiction, and violence over prison life,” prosecutor­s wrote.

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