• It's FREE to join our group and ALL MEMBERS ARE AD-FREE!

DECKER GIRLS: 3 missing Wenatchee, WA girls found murdered, father on the run *Found Deceased* (1 Viewer)

1749157125416.png

Three missing girls in Wenatchee found dead, father still missing​

Three missing girls in the Wenatchee area were found dead, according to the Wenatchee Police Department.

According to the police department, police responded to reports of a civil complaint when the mom of three young girls reported that her daughters did not return after a planned visitation with their father.

Police said Decker was believed to be living out of a white 2017 GMC Sierra pickup, which was last seen heading west on Highway 2 from Wenatchee on May 30.

WSP was contacted Friday night for an Amber Alert request, but Wenatchee Police said it did not meet the required criteria, and an Endangered Missing Person Alert was issued.

Law enforcement eventually found Decker's car unoccupied near the Rock Island Campground.

Other officers searched the immediate area and found the bodies of the three missing girls.

Decker is wanted for three counts of first-degree murder and first-degree kidnapping. Police do not know if Decker is currently armed, but he may still pose a significant risk, according to police.

1748970026990.png
 
Last edited:
How the heck did they miss him? I wonder if he doubled back once he knew where they were searching or whether he never went far in the first place and just killed himself.
The sheriff said it was in an area that had not been searched yet, plus you have to take into consideration of the very rough terrain. The terrain is why they had to helicopter in the recovery team.
 

How a monthslong hunt for a fugitive father brought investigators right back to where they started​



Investigators spent the summer combing the wilderness of the Washington Cascades for Travis Decker – the man thought to have killed his three young daughters at a campground at the end of May. A backdrop of rugged mountains and scenic trails gave way to specialized search teams, helicopters and dogs as officials attempted to track down the fugitive father, with the search even crossing over the border into Canada and Mexico as tips were chased down.

But when investigators found fragments of bone believed to belong to Decker on Thursday, they were less than a mile away from the abandoned campsite where the girls’ bodies were discovered on June 2, each suffocated with multiple plastic bags over their heads.

The brutal deaths sent shockwaves across the popular tourist destination as officials cautioned residents that Decker — an Army veteran skilled in wilderness survival — should be considered dangerous.

The search for Decker has been complicated by the fact that he’d had a three-day head start in a rural area known for its wild beauty and treacherous terrain in the Cascade mountain range outside the city of Leavenworth.

Drones, a swift water team, cadaver dogs and GoPros punctured the peace in the tranquil and majestic mountains and triggered a closure of the Enchantments, an area popular for backcountry hiking and camping, as law enforcement scoured the forest for any signs of the bearded Army veteran.

Investigators were searching a remote and virtually uninhabitable area on Grindstone Mountain this week when a drone flying overhead detected something unusual in a thicket of trees.

“It was an area that we had not gotten to search in that kind of detail yet. So we deployed drones, other resources, and it was where we had aimed to search next,” Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison told CNN on Friday.

Evelyn, Paityn and Olivia Decker are remembered as incredible by their mother.

Evelyn, Paityn and Olivia Decker are remembered as "incredible" by their mother.

Wenatchee Police Department
The area is “steep,” the sheriff said. “It is thickly brushed. It’s not populated. It is not a travel trail. It is not an area that people typically frequent.”

Investigators rappelled down to the site, where they discovered bone fragments and other remains, along with personal items, including the shirt and shorts that matched those Decker was last seen in.

The bone fragments were scattered – likely the result of animals scavenging, Morrison added.

The discovery brings a possible end to a frustrating months-long search effort that cost millions of dollars, but a slew of questions about the case are still unanswered.

The human remains have yet to be positively identified as Decker’s, and it’s unclear how – or when – the person died.

Decker hadn’t been seen since May 30, when he failed to return daughters 5-year-old Olivia, 8-year-old Evelyn and 9-year-old Paityn to their mother, his ex-wife, Whitney Decker after a three hour scheduled custody visit.

Just a month after Decker disappeared, the Kittitas County Sheriff’s Office, which assisted in the manhunt, had said they had no indication Decker was alive, or that he was in the area near the crime scene.

And there had been no trace of him – no credit card transactions, no phone activity – since the girls were killed, Morrison said Friday.

Related article
Vance Boelter, accused of shooting two Minnesota state lawmakers and their spouses, is taken into custody by law enforcement about a mile away from his family home Sunday.

Some fugitives don’t get very far, even with a good head start. What complicates their escape?

A sudden breakthrough​

The patch of Grindstone Mountain where the bone fragments were found is at a little over 4,000 feet of elevation and just under ¾ of a mile away from the crime scene where the Decker sisters were discovered.

“That’s straight uphill. You’re almost looking like a little over 1,000 feet of elevation gain in a little bit of distance,” Morrison said. “It would take almost three hours to hike in there, just based off the terrain and the rock formations.”

Unlike other parts of the Cascades, where campgrounds are plentiful and the Pacific Crest Trail attracts hundreds of hikers, this area is desolate.

Law enforcement officers searched extensively for the fugitive father, including by helicopter as seen here in a handout photo from June 6.

Law enforcement officers searched extensively for the fugitive father, including by helicopter as seen here in a handout photo from June 6.

Snohomish County Sheriff's Office photo/AP
“There was nothing in that area,” Morrison said. “There were no campsites. There’s no trails, there’s no climbing routes. It’s just wilderness.”

After they landed on the mountainside, detectives hiked an hour to get back down from the steep, trailless slope.

“Thankfully, we’ve got detectives who are in pretty good shape,” Morrison said. “They’re used to hunting in the backcountry, so they’re used to the terrain. And they accepted the challenge.”

Guy Mansfield – a longtime search and rescue volunteer in Washington state who serves as a director of the Washington State SAR Planning Unit – told CNN that the search area around the campground was rough and vast, complicating search efforts.

“Thoroughly searching in a 2-mile radius from the campground would involve an area approaching 3,000 acres of rough terrain,” he said.

It likely would have been difficult to deploy ground teams and K-9 units to the remote mountainside where the remains were found, according to Mansfield, who was not involved with the search.

When remains are scattered by animals – as seems to have happened with the remains found Thursday – they’re much more difficult to identify, he added.

And searchers had to plan for two wildly different contingencies, Mansfield explained: That Decker was extremely close to the crime scene – or that he was very far away. “This would have spread search resources thin,” he said.

Trey Werner, the founder and executive director of Washington-based Wilderness Search Investigations, added that even from a drone, a motionless body would be very difficult to identify in heavy brush.

Questions unanswered​

It’s difficult to say how long the remains had been on the mountainside, according to Morrison. Decomposition was “well, well in place,” he said.

For the family members left grieving, and the public, the events after Decker’s disappearance remain a mystery. The coroner’s office will provide more information later about a possible cause and time of death, Morrison said.

The sheriff said that he had requested to expedite the lab work needed to identify the remains. But they don’t know yet when they’ll get those answers.

Travis Decker was last seen May 30.

Travis Decker was last seen May 30.

Chelan County Sheriff's Office
DNA profiles are the most reliable method for identifying skeletal remains, according to Dr. Nicole Jackson, attending pathologist and director of Autopsy & After Death Services at the University of Washington Medicine Hospital. But a successful match can take weeks or even months – and the more degraded the remains, the harder they can be to identify.

Jackson added that forensic pathologists tend to give ranges for the time period when a person died, rather than precise dates, because it’s so difficult to determine.

Skeletonization can take weeks to month to years, depending on the conditions, she told CNN.

Authorities have also yet to say why they think Decker killed his daughters. The sheriff said no note was found among the personal items by the human remains.

Morrison said the case is an emotional one, for his deputies – whom he’s required to talk to psychologists to take care of their mental health – and for himself.

“These weren’t even my daughters, but it certainly hit home,” he said.

Related article
In this handout photo provided by the Snohomish County Sheriff's Office deputies participate in the search for Travis Decker, at an undisclosed location in Washington state, Friday, June 6, 2025. (Snohomish County Sheriff's Office photo via AP)

Is Travis Decker alive? A fruitless 4-week manhunt has produced ‘no certain evidence’

A veteran with survival skills on the run​

As the manhunt for Decker began, authorities had warned that Decker should be considered dangerous, though they didn’t know if he was armed.

And his outdoor skills might have made him harder to track and find: An army veteran whose eight years of service included a tour in Afghanistan, he was an avid hiker and hunter and had previously lived “off the grid in the backwoods” for up to two and a half months at a time, a deputy US Marshal said in a court affidavit.

He likely escaped on foot after abandoning his truck near the girls’ bodies, Morrison has told CNN. He also left behind equipment – and his dog – so he was unprepared unless he stashed supplies out in the woods.

Still, Decker had “training in navigation, woodland/mountainous terrain, long distance movements, survival and numerous other disciplines needed to be able to flee from the Eastern District of Washington,” the affidavit added.

Chelan County Sheriff Michael Morrison told CNN the search for Decker has been hard on him and his deputies.

Chelan County Sheriff Michael Morrison told CNN the search for Decker has been hard on him and his deputies.

CNN
Werner, who was not involved in the search for Decker, told CNN that to survive for weeks, he would have needed extensive knowledge about which plants in the area were safe to eat and how to hunt and prepare wildlife to eat. And he would’ve needed a water source and some kind of shelter to survive varying weather conditions.

He had been homeless at the time of his disappearance, living on campgrounds and in motels, Whitney Decker told investigators.

But the sheriff cautioned that even with Decker’s background, he couldn’t hide out forever.

“We’re not going to glorify his abilities. We don’t think that he’s some kind of special forces guru,” Morrison had said. “He could get lucky at times, and eventually luck runs out.”

Local authorities have said there was no sign that anyone was helping Decker.

Her former husband had been diagnosed several years ago with borderline personality disorder, Whitney Decker told investigators. The diagnosis can involve “extreme mood fluctuations, instability in interpersonal relationships and impulsivity,” the Cleveland Clinic says.

Decker had refused to sign his and Whitney’s most recent parenting agreement, which required him to seek mental health treatment and anger management, she told police.

Still, Whitney Decker said her ex-husband’s dog and his daughters “are the two big positives in his life,” according to the affidavit.

“He was very active with their extracurricular activities, their dance, their soccer games, all of those things. He was very involved,” her family attorney has previously said.

The last time she saw Travis Decker, he was a little quieter than usual but otherwise seemed fine. Whitney Decker kissed and hugged their daughters goodbye like she always did – not knowing it would be the last time she saw them alive.

Travis Decker's truck was found abandoned in the area of Rock Island Campground.

Travis Decker's truck was found abandoned in the area of Rock Island Campground.

FBI/AP

Exhaustive search efforts​

Federal and local authorities seemingly employed every tool in their toolkits as they hunted for Decker, who was charged with murder and kidnapping after his daughters’ bodies were discovered.

They slowly expanded their search, starting just a quarter mile radius from the campground and working their way out, Morrison explained.

In July, Morrison estimated that the search had already cost “well over” $6 million. It would have cost half his department’s budget for the year had it not been for the help of other agencies, including the National Park Service, National Forest Service, US Customs and Border Protection, the FBI and the US Marshal Service.


The search even extended as far north as Canada and as far south as Mexico.

In the days before he kidnapped his daughters, Decker had searched on Google for “how does a person move to Canada” and similar phrases, the US Marshals said in their court filing. Marshals noted that Decker’s campsite was less than a dozen miles from the Pacific Crest Trail, which “leads directly to Canada.”

“We worked with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police,” Morrison previously told CNN. “They were doing some follow-up on some leads we had up in Canada.”

They also received tips in Mexico and did their best to follow up, Morrison said.

The months-long search was interrupted by several false alarms that offered hope Decker had been found.

In June, reports emerged that Decker had been spotted in McCall, Idaho. But Morrison later clarified that the person wasn’t Decker.

And in late August, the FBI discovered bones during a grid search for Decker. But a review later established that they weren’t human.

The US Marshals Service had offered a $20,000 award for information leading to Decker’s arrest. He was considered the sole suspect in his daughters’ killings.

Related article
A missed drop-off and tragedy at a campground. How a manhunt for a father accused of killing his 3 daughters is unfolding

A mother’s grief​

Although the hunt for Decker may be over, the tragedy wrought on his family is lasting.

The three girls’ “light touched so many, and the pain of this loss is immeasurable,” reads the description for a GoFundMe for Whitney Decker. The fundraiser has raised over a million dollars to help the grieving mother “cover final expenses, support time off from work, and give her space to heal without financial pressure.”

Paityn, Evelyn and Olivia's deaths have rocked the community in Chelan County.

Whitney Decker’s attorney, Arianna Cozart, told ABC News, “We are praying that the remains found are confirmed to be Travis’s. We continue to be grateful for law enforcement’s efforts in this case and are forever appreciative of the entire world’s love, compassion, and support for Whitney.”

CNN has reached out to Cozart for comment.

At a public memorial service in June, attendees wore purple, pink, and green – the girls’ favorite colors. Teachers, friends, and family members shared stories of three vibrant children who loved theater and were quick to laugh.

Tyler Scharlau, who worked with the girls at the YMCA and at their elementary school, said that all three “brought something special into the lives they touched.”

Peyton had been the first to show a new student around when she arrived at the school, he remembered.

“She had a way with making others feel included, making sure no one was left behind, not because she had to, but because it was simply who she was,” Scharlau said.

Whitney Decker said that she was grateful for the time she had with her daughters before their lives were cut short.

“I truly hope that the legacy of the girls’ lives lives on in everyone’s heart forever,” she said, tearing up. “They were incredible.”

 
Wondering how he wasn't just "found" with the initial searches and why they hadn't made it on the original searches to where he was found? Some pics here showing how they were being lowered from a helicopter to get to the area he was finally found in.


Travis Decker update: Discovery of human remains could end search​

Sep. 19, 2025 at 12:56 pm Updated Sep. 19, 2025 at 5:07 pm
Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
By
Kai Uyehara
and
Sara Jean Green
Seattle Times staff reporters
CHELAN COUNTY — The spot where authorities on Thursday found human remains believed to belong to Travis Decker was less than a mile from where the bodies of his three young daughters were discovered in early June near the Rock Island Campground, south of Leavenworth.
Though geographically close, thick vegetation, dense woods and the steep slopes of Grindstone Mountain stood between the two sites, according to Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison.
Travis Decker search
Decker-found-IcicleCreekRoad09.19.25-W2.jpg

Sources: Esri, Chelan County sheriff’s office (Mark Nowlin / The Seattle Times)
The human remains found Thursday — part of a spinal column, a femur and feet — were decomposed and scattered, likely by animals, said Morrison. Searchers also found a shirt, shorts and a bracelet that matched what Decker was last seen wearing, along with a can of chewing tobacco, which Decker was known to use, he said.
Morrison said they will wait for results to come back from the Washington State Patrol crime lab for confirmation, but he was very confident the remains belonged to Decker.
Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison gives an update about the Travis Decker investigation Friday at the incident base in Leavenworth. Human remains found Thursday — part of a spinal column, a femur and feet — that are believed to be Decker’s, were decomposed and scattered, likely by animals, said Morrison. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison gives an update about the Travis Decker investigation Friday at the incident base in Leavenworth. Human remains found Thursday — part of a spinal column, a femur and feet — that are believed to be Decker’s, were decomposed and scattered, likely by animals, said Morrison. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

A worker from the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab cleans off evidence markers at the incident base for the Travis Decker investigation on Friday in Leavenworth. State Patrol spokesperson Chris Loftis anticipates the DNA testing of remains believed to be Decker’s is being expedited, and results could arrive next week. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

1 of 2 | Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison gives an update about the Travis Decker investigation Friday at the incident base in Leavenworth. Human remains found Thursday — part of a spinal column, a femur and feet... (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
State Patrol spokesperson Chris Loftis anticipates the DNA testing is being expedited, and results could arrive next week.
Federal and local law enforcement crews were conducting their fourth grid and drone search of rough terrain around the campground when the remains were discovered in an area that had not been previously searched, Morrison said Friday. Crews rappelled from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter to the site, which is about three-quarters of a mile away and 2,000 feet in elevation above where the bodies of Olivia, Evelyn and Paityn Decker were discovered June 2.
The Rock Island Campground is nearly 17 miles down Icicle Road from Leavenworth.
On Friday morning, a thin haze sank between the layers of peaked mountains above a camp of law enforcement vehicles on the way up Icicle Road.
Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found Thursday near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found Thursday near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis... (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
A dog barked from the back of a K-9 police vehicle as officers from local and federal agencies milled about the camp, some gathering under the shade of a tent outside a Douglas County sheriff’s trailer.
Behind the vehicles, crews loaded equipment into a helicopter between its flights up the mountain and a crew member zipped up in a bright orange flight suit.
The Decker sisters, ages 5, 8 and 9, were reported missing May 30 after their father failed to return them to their mother’s Wenatchee home per a court-ordered custody agreement. The girls were found a couple days later, fatally suffocated with their wrists bound, near Decker’s 2017 GMC Sierra pickup.
From left, Evelyn Decker, 8; Olivia Decker, 5; and Paityn Decker, 9. (Courtesy Wenatchee Police Department)
From left, Evelyn Decker, 8; Olivia Decker, 5; and Paityn Decker, 9.  (Courtesy Wenatchee Police Department)

From left, Evelyn Decker, 8; Olivia Decker, 5; and Paityn Decker, 9. (Courtesy Wenatchee Police Department)
The discovery of the girls’ bodies kicked off a summerlong search for Decker, an Army veteran and skilled outdoorsman who was charged with three counts of aggravated first-degree murder and three counts of first-degree kidnapping.
A week after the girls’ bodies were found, a tip from a hiking party about a lone person ill-prepared for trail conditions intensified the search for Decker in the Enchantments area. Tracking teams spotted an off-trail hiker who ran from a helicopter flying near Colchuck Lake. More searchers and a police K-9 unit were called in and tracked a man believed to be Decker many miles away to the Ingalls Creek trailhead, south of the unincorporated community of Peshastin, off Highway 97.

Travis Decker search

Despite the assistance of federal, state and local law enforcement agencies, Decker remained elusive, and authorities did not know if he was alive or dead. The FBI closed multiple campgrounds, hiking trails and roads in the Leavenworth area as part of the search, and repeatedly sought the public’s help to find him.
The search for Decker had cost more than $2 million within the first week. Morrison, the Chelan County sheriff, said Friday the county would have gone bankrupt if not for the assistance of federal agencies, including the U.S. Marshals Service and Border Patrol. Chelan County covers nearly 3,000 square miles, and 87% of it is inaccessible by roads, so even with the extra help, there weren’t enough resources to look everywhere, he said.
A Spokane County sheriff's helicopter takes crews to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found on Thursday near Grindstone Mountain, seen on Friday Sept. 19, 2025 near Leavenworth. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
It’s unknown how long the remains had been out there. There was no clear indication of the cause of death, and Morrison didn’t say whether any weapons were found near the remains.
In downtown Wenatchee, ribbons — green for Olivia, pink for Evelyn and purple for Paityn — still adorned the trees planted along the sidewalks more than two months after they first appeared when the community held a June 20 celebration of life for the Decker sisters.
The tree outside The Bloom Flowery is decorated with a pink ribbon tied in a bow, and is a reminder to owner Cindy Gonzalez of her brief meeting with Evelyn Decker and her mother, Whitney, who came into her flower and gift shop two weeks before the sisters disappeared.
A ribbon is tied around a tree outside The Bloom Flowery in Wenatchee in memory of Evelyn Decker, Olivia Decker and Paityn Decker, who were found dead earlier this summer at a campsite near Leavenworth. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
A ribbon is tied around a tree outside The Bloom Flowery in Wenatchee in memory of Evelyn Decker, Olivia Decker and Paityn Decker, who were found dead earlier this summer at a campsite near Leavenworth. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

A ribbon is tied around a tree outside The Bloom Flowery in Wenatchee in memory of Evelyn Decker, Olivia Decker and Paityn Decker, who were found dead earlier this summer at a campsite near Leavenworth. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
In the days after the girls’ bodies were found, Gonzalez and other business owners started a fundraiser, collecting thousands of dollars in donations for Whitney Decker.

Most Read Local Stories​

Gonzalez is skeptical whether the remains found Thursday in fact belong to Travis Decker and is waiting with the rest of Wenatchee for confirmation of his apparent death. If it comes, she hopes it will bring the family peace, “knowing he’s not out there somewhere.”
“We still remember them,” Gonzalez said of the Decker sisters, with a nod to the ribbons on the trees outside her store. “We have not forgotten.”
 
Well Decker managed to hike to this area so it can be done. My guess is they were dropped in by helicopter as it was far easier and expeditious and made more sense than having all officers do a grueling hike. It sound as if they did walk back down or some did as they remarked on the time it took in one article.

I'm really curious how their drones work. I mean I'm familiar with an average drone that someone you know might have and know many have cameras and voice, etc. However, I'm guessing these drones are more sophisticated? First it had to see something unusual through dense coverage and they have to fly high enough to clear trees, etc. Are they programmed to alert or something and programmed as to what is unusual? Or was someone simply monitoring the drone footage that day? I'm guessing it is more than that and the drones or programs they run footage through have some serious capabilities. I'd really like to hear more about that.

Well he's found and to heck with that POS. My mind and heart comes back to the girls and how awful this was and their final moments were at the hands of dad. I can't even imagine much less losing your entire family and world and three daughters. I'm glad people have mom financially covered so one thing she does not have to worry about while dealing with such a loss.
 
Wondering how he wasn't just "found" with the initial searches and why they hadn't made it on the original searches to where he was found? Some pics here showing how they were being lowered from a helicopter to get to the area he was finally found in.


Travis Decker update: Discovery of human remains could end search​

Sep. 19, 2025 at 12:56 pm Updated Sep. 19, 2025 at 5:07 pm
Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
By
Kai Uyehara
and
Sara Jean Green
Seattle Times staff reporters
CHELAN COUNTY — The spot where authorities on Thursday found human remains believed to belong to Travis Decker was less than a mile from where the bodies of his three young daughters were discovered in early June near the Rock Island Campground, south of Leavenworth.
Though geographically close, thick vegetation, dense woods and the steep slopes of Grindstone Mountain stood between the two sites, according to Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison.
Travis Decker search
Decker-found-IcicleCreekRoad09.19.25-W2.jpg

Sources: Esri, Chelan County sheriff’s office (Mark Nowlin / The Seattle Times)
The human remains found Thursday — part of a spinal column, a femur and feet — were decomposed and scattered, likely by animals, said Morrison. Searchers also found a shirt, shorts and a bracelet that matched what Decker was last seen wearing, along with a can of chewing tobacco, which Decker was known to use, he said.
Morrison said they will wait for results to come back from the Washington State Patrol crime lab for confirmation, but he was very confident the remains belonged to Decker.
Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison gives an update about the Travis Decker investigation Friday at the incident base in Leavenworth. Human remains found Thursday — part of a spinal column, a femur and feet — that are believed to be Decker’s, were decomposed and scattered, likely by animals, said Morrison. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison gives an update about the Travis Decker investigation Friday at the incident base in Leavenworth. Human remains found Thursday — part of a spinal column, a femur and feet — that are believed to be Decker’s, were decomposed and scattered, likely by animals, said Morrison. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

A worker from the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab cleans off evidence markers at the incident base for the Travis Decker investigation on Friday in Leavenworth. State Patrol spokesperson Chris Loftis anticipates the DNA testing of remains believed to be Decker’s is being expedited, and results could arrive next week. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

1 of 2 | Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison gives an update about the Travis Decker investigation Friday at the incident base in Leavenworth. Human remains found Thursday — part of a spinal column, a femur and feet... (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
State Patrol spokesperson Chris Loftis anticipates the DNA testing is being expedited, and results could arrive next week.
Federal and local law enforcement crews were conducting their fourth grid and drone search of rough terrain around the campground when the remains were discovered in an area that had not been previously searched, Morrison said Friday. Crews rappelled from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter to the site, which is about three-quarters of a mile away and 2,000 feet in elevation above where the bodies of Olivia, Evelyn and Paityn Decker were discovered June 2.
The Rock Island Campground is nearly 17 miles down Icicle Road from Leavenworth.
On Friday morning, a thin haze sank between the layers of peaked mountains above a camp of law enforcement vehicles on the way up Icicle Road.
Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found Thursday near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found Thursday near Grindstone Mountain. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

Authorities rappel from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter near Leavenworth on Friday to the site where human remains believed to be Travis... (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
A dog barked from the back of a K-9 police vehicle as officers from local and federal agencies milled about the camp, some gathering under the shade of a tent outside a Douglas County sheriff’s trailer.
Behind the vehicles, crews loaded equipment into a helicopter between its flights up the mountain and a crew member zipped up in a bright orange flight suit.
The Decker sisters, ages 5, 8 and 9, were reported missing May 30 after their father failed to return them to their mother’s Wenatchee home per a court-ordered custody agreement. The girls were found a couple days later, fatally suffocated with their wrists bound, near Decker’s 2017 GMC Sierra pickup.
From left, Evelyn Decker, 8; Olivia Decker, 5; and Paityn Decker, 9. (Courtesy Wenatchee Police Department)
From left, Evelyn Decker, 8; Olivia Decker, 5; and Paityn Decker, 9.  (Courtesy Wenatchee Police Department)

From left, Evelyn Decker, 8; Olivia Decker, 5; and Paityn Decker, 9. (Courtesy Wenatchee Police Department)
The discovery of the girls’ bodies kicked off a summerlong search for Decker, an Army veteran and skilled outdoorsman who was charged with three counts of aggravated first-degree murder and three counts of first-degree kidnapping.
A week after the girls’ bodies were found, a tip from a hiking party about a lone person ill-prepared for trail conditions intensified the search for Decker in the Enchantments area. Tracking teams spotted an off-trail hiker who ran from a helicopter flying near Colchuck Lake. More searchers and a police K-9 unit were called in and tracked a man believed to be Decker many miles away to the Ingalls Creek trailhead, south of the unincorporated community of Peshastin, off Highway 97.

Travis Decker search

Despite the assistance of federal, state and local law enforcement agencies, Decker remained elusive, and authorities did not know if he was alive or dead. The FBI closed multiple campgrounds, hiking trails and roads in the Leavenworth area as part of the search, and repeatedly sought the public’s help to find him.
The search for Decker had cost more than $2 million within the first week. Morrison, the Chelan County sheriff, said Friday the county would have gone bankrupt if not for the assistance of federal agencies, including the U.S. Marshals Service and Border Patrol. Chelan County covers nearly 3,000 square miles, and 87% of it is inaccessible by roads, so even with the extra help, there weren’t enough resources to look everywhere, he said.
A Spokane County sheriff's helicopter takes crews to the site where human remains believed to be Travis Decker’s were found on Thursday near Grindstone Mountain, seen on Friday Sept. 19, 2025 near Leavenworth. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
It’s unknown how long the remains had been out there. There was no clear indication of the cause of death, and Morrison didn’t say whether any weapons were found near the remains.
In downtown Wenatchee, ribbons — green for Olivia, pink for Evelyn and purple for Paityn — still adorned the trees planted along the sidewalks more than two months after they first appeared when the community held a June 20 celebration of life for the Decker sisters.
The tree outside The Bloom Flowery is decorated with a pink ribbon tied in a bow, and is a reminder to owner Cindy Gonzalez of her brief meeting with Evelyn Decker and her mother, Whitney, who came into her flower and gift shop two weeks before the sisters disappeared.
A ribbon is tied around a tree outside The Bloom Flowery in Wenatchee in memory of Evelyn Decker, Olivia Decker and Paityn Decker, who were found dead earlier this summer at a campsite near Leavenworth. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
A ribbon is tied around a tree outside The Bloom Flowery in Wenatchee in memory of Evelyn Decker, Olivia Decker and Paityn Decker, who were found dead earlier this summer at a campsite near Leavenworth. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

A ribbon is tied around a tree outside The Bloom Flowery in Wenatchee in memory of Evelyn Decker, Olivia Decker and Paityn Decker, who were found dead earlier this summer at a campsite near Leavenworth. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
In the days after the girls’ bodies were found, Gonzalez and other business owners started a fundraiser, collecting thousands of dollars in donations for Whitney Decker.

Most Read Local Stories​

Gonzalez is skeptical whether the remains found Thursday in fact belong to Travis Decker and is waiting with the rest of Wenatchee for confirmation of his apparent death. If it comes, she hopes it will bring the family peace, “knowing he’s not out there somewhere.”
“We still remember them,” Gonzalez said of the Decker sisters, with a nod to the ribbons on the trees outside her store. “We have not forgotten.”

That map and detail makes me think he purposefully hiked to a high area and jumped off.
Also from the article is detail that the elevation was about 2,000 feet above where the girls were found.

"Federal and local law enforcement crews were conducting their fourth grid and drone search of rough terrain around the campground when the remains were discovered in an area that had not been previously searched, Morrison said Friday. Crews rappelled from a Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter to the site, which is about three-quarters of a mile away and 2,000 feet in elevation above where the bodies of Olivia, Evelyn and Paityn Decker were discovered June 2."


I did a screen shot of the map too. So he walked/climbed for three quarters of a mile uphill 2,000 feet. They also didn't find many remains - part of a spinal column, a femur and two feet.

Screenshot_20250921-150811_Samsung Internet.webp
 
Last edited:
My guess would be gunshot or hanging himself. If so, they should find either a gun or a rope. If I recall, they were not sure if he was armed.
 
while it seems logical that it was him, there is a clarification now that they "might" have jumped the gun in announcing it was definitely him they found

Chelan County Sheriff's Office | Wenatchee WA | Facebook

Chelan County Sheriff's Office Response to U.S. Marshals' Filing Regarding Travis Decker:

It has come to our attention the U.S. Marshals Service has filed court documents indicating that Travis Decker is deceased.

At this time, the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office is not in a position to make a positive identification or confirmation of Mr. Decker's status. We are currently awaiting DNA test results from the state Crime Lab, which are expected to be returned within the next few days.

Once the DNA results are confirmed, the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office will hold a press conference to share findings and address any questions from the media and public.
We appreciate your patience and understanding as we work to ensure the accuracy and integrity of this investigation.
 
while it seems logical that it was him, there is a clarification now that they "might" have jumped the gun in announcing it was definitely him they found

Chelan County Sheriff's Office | Wenatchee WA | Facebook

Chelan County Sheriff's Office Response to U.S. Marshals' Filing Regarding Travis Decker:

It has come to our attention the U.S. Marshals Service has filed court documents indicating that Travis Decker is deceased.

At this time, the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office is not in a position to make a positive identification or confirmation of Mr. Decker's status. We are currently awaiting DNA test results from the state Crime Lab, which are expected to be returned within the next few days.

Once the DNA results are confirmed, the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office will hold a press conference to share findings and address any questions from the media and public.
We appreciate your patience and understanding as we work to ensure the accuracy and integrity of this investigation.
Imagine his ex wife hearing this and not knowing. It has to be him though right?
 
Hopefully it just has to do with legalities. Announcing it is definitely him when they don't have the DNA results on his body yet was probably not the right move.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Forum statistics

Threads
3,175
Messages
271,721
Members
1,058
Latest member
Friendofafriend
Back
Top Bottom