Lost in the Alaskan Wilderness, Troopers Launch a Search | Alaska State Troopers
The Alaskan wilderness has a way of swallowing the truth, but usually, it waits for a person to actually get lost before the lies start to fester. In the case of the man found shivering on the banks of the Tanana River near Nenana, the fiction began long before the frostbite.
The situation was framed as a nightmare for a spouse back in Texas. Her husband had reportedly traveled north for a wolf-hunting expedition with a mysterious, unnamed friend. The narrative she fed to the authorities was a frantic collage of text messages that shifted from a survival crisis to a horror movie plot. First came the claims of falling into the water, being “lost cold,” and sitting naked on a riverbank. Then, the tone curdled into something more sinister. He claimed the “friend” was acting weird and suspicious. The final transmission was the universal shorthand for terror: “Help.”
When the rescue team finally spotted him emerging from the woods, the reality was jarringly literal. He was completely naked. No gear, no weapons, no wolf-hunting trophies. Just a man stripped of his dignity and, apparently, his grip on a believable story.
After being wrapped in a black sweatshirt and met by medics, the man spun a tale of abduction that would make a pulp novelist cringe. He claimed that while traveling downriver, two men ambushed them from behind. One supposedly whacked his “buddy” with a piece of metal and dragged him away, while the other knocked the victim unconscious. He claimed he woke up stripped of his clothing, bound by zip ties at his wrists and ankles.
The hypocrisy of his story began to unravel the moment the investigators looked at his skin. There were no defensive wounds. No bruising on the scalp where he claimed to have been struck. Most damningly, there was not a single mark on his wrists or ankles consistent with being bound by zip ties. The physical evidence—or lack thereof—spoke louder than his trembling voice.
The logistical holes were even wider. Investigator Belle noted that the “victim” claimed to have texted his wife while his hands were bound behind his back by using his tongue. He then allegedly swam across the glacial waters of the Tanana River with his hands still secured behind him. It was a feat of athleticism and digital dexterity that defied the laws of physics and biology.
Searching the area revealed the final nails in the coffin of his narrative. There was no sign of a struggle, no second person, no campfire, and no hunting equipment. When they finally linked his meager belongings back to his truck in the parking lot, they found a Walmart tent and a bag of jerky. This wasn’t a wolf hunter; this was a man playing at being a mountain man with the budget of a weekend camper.
The investigators quickly realized they weren’t looking at a crime scene, but a bizarre, desperate attempt at an “Into the Wild” rebirth. He had a one-way ticket to Alaska and no plan to return. He hadn’t been kidnapped; he had been trying to “become lost,” orchestrating a dramatic disappearance to escape a life in Texas he clearly couldn’t handle. He wasn’t a victim of a suspicious friend, but of his own poorly scripted fantasy. In the end, the only thing he successfully hunted in the Alaskan brush was the attention of a rescue crew he never should have needed.