In September 2015, Evan Carter, 29 years old, and his wife, Lily Hartman, 27 years old, vanished without a trace, while hiking on the Watchman Peak Trail in Crater Lake National Park, Oregon.

For 7 years, everyone believed they had died, victims of an accident, or perhaps swallowed by the harsh wilderness of this volcanic region.

But in May 2022, Evan Carter suddenly appeared on the side of Highway 62, alive but unrecognizable.

What he told police once he was able to speak shocked even the most seasoned investigators where he had been for those seven years and what really happened to him and Lily.

On September 18th, 2015, Crater Lake National Park entered early fall with temperatures lower than forecast, persistent fog, and gusty winds on the slopes, creating unpredictable and potentially dangerous weather conditions for any hiker venturing deep into the trail system around the caldera rim.

That morning, Evan Carter and his wife Lily Hartman were at Rim Village, parked their car in the main lot, and prepared to set out for their planned short hike.

Security cameras at the visitor facilities captured the couple leaving the parking lot at 8:42 a.m.

Carrying a small backpack and a paper trail map, heading toward the start of the Watchman Peak Trail.

One of the routes considered beautiful, but prone to becoming dangerous when the weather turns bad.

Around 10:50 a.m., another group of hikers confirmed encountering Evan and Lily on the uphill section, describing both as completely normal, stopping to take photos for a few minutes before continuing.

After 11:30 a.m., observation post recorded increasing strong winds and fog rising from the lake surface, obscuring visibility across most of the rim area.

According to their original plan, Evan and Lily intended to return to their rented cabin at Mazama Village by late afternoon for dinner, but by 4:30 p.m.

they had not returned.

Resort staff checked the cabin and noted that the room had not been used that day.

By 7:40 p.m., unable to contact the couple and noting the prolonged abnormality, the resort proactively called Lily’s family to report the situation.

At the end of the day, at 10:21 p.m., with all contact attempts yielding no response and no further signs that Evan and Lily had left the safe area, the family was forced to report the incident to the Crater Lake Ranger Station, officially activating the protocol for handling a missing person’s case in a national park.

That same night, upon receiving the information, search and rescue teams were placed on standby.

A temporary command group was established and all baseline data related to the couple was collected from their planned itinerary and the route they reported to resort staff to their morning departure time from the cabin and the last recorded movements via surveillance cameras.

From this, SAR determined the last known point as the Watchman Peak trail head area based on the 8:42 a.m.

footage at Rim Village and confirmation from the hikers who encountered them around 10:50 a.m.

Patrol teams immediately swept the entire trailside area within safe accessible range after dark, focusing on high-risk spots for slips, cliff edges, and low visibility sections near Watchman Peak extending to Discovery Point.

Concurrently, a drone unit was deployed to scan the western cliffs with infrared, searching for anomalous heat signatures in the thick fog.

K9 units were released at the last camera recorded point to track scent, but after a few hundred meters, the scent trail became intermittent due to strong winds and rugged rocky terrain, making tracking unstable.

On the first day of searching, SAR interviewed all hikers present between 9:00 a.m.and 1:00 p.m., cross-referencing descriptions of appearance and direction of travel, but no witnesses reported seeing any signs of distress or deviation from the trail by the couple.

To rule out the possibility of them returning to the cabin undetected, another team thoroughly checked Evan and Lily’s accommodation, confirming the room remained untouched from the morning with no disturbed items and absolutely no evidence they had returned.

By the end of the second day, after the entire area around Watchman Peak and branches leading to Rim Drive had been basically swept with no physical clues, indicating Evan and Lily were lost or had an accident.

The search and rescue commander had to acknowledge that the initial search perimeter was no longer sufficient to explain the couple’s complete disappearance.

Faced with this reality, the operation was scaled up and over the next 12 days, SAR formally expanded the search radius to nearly 15 mi from the last known point, dividing the area into grid cells per ICS standards to ensure no complex or rarely visited terrain was overlooked.

Initial teams were redirected to additional trail branches, including Lightning Spring Trail, the western segment of Rim Trail, and the area near North Junction, assessed as high probability if the couple had left Watchman Peak off trail.

Long range patrol teams were also mobilized from neighboring counties like Jackson and Clamoth, equipped with climbing gear, slip trace detection tools, and GPS systems calibrated for reliable operation in dense fog.

With no signs on land after four consecutive days, the Ezu commander decided to deploy a lakeside dive team to survey the Crater Lake rim where sheer cliffs dropped straight into the water.

The dive team could not descend beyond safe depths due to Crater Lakes’s nearly 600 meter depth.

But they scanned the entire shoreline from Cleletwood Cove to near Palisades Point, looking for three key elements, floating personal items, bright colored clothing, and impact marks on rocks suggesting a fall point.

However, throughout the survey, no objects or traces related to Evan or Lily were found.

Expanding to trails, Ezar swept the entire subsidiary trail system, especially overlooked sections like the Union Peak Connector and small paths leading to seasonally closed rim drive segments.

Foot patrol teams discovered numerous mixed shoe prints from other visitors, but when compared to sole patterns provided by the family, none matched.

Additionally, no long skid marks, disturbed soil, or any typical indicators of a hiker falling downhill were recorded.

Notably, one K9 unit redeployed to the western lake area picked up intermittent signals near an old closed ATV route from years prior.

The dog showed mild reactions, but the scent trail ended completely after a few dozen meters.

So, this result was only noted in the activity log and not deemed sufficient for formal evaluation.

Meanwhile, evidence teams continually scanned every slope section and trailside tree cluster for fabric scraps, buttons, broken plastic from water bottles, even scratch marks on soil or roots.

Small details that are often critical clues.

However, absolutely no personal items belonging to the missing pair were found, including hats, jackets, camera lenses, food wrappers, or the paper map captured on camera as being carried.

Concurrently, sheriff’s teams interviewed additional late day visitors from the disappearance date, especially those exiting via northern and southern gates to confirm if anyone saw the couple leave the area.

But results remain negative.

No one saw Evan or Lily after 10:50 a.m.

and no vehicle matching their rental plate left the park in the afternoon or evening.

By the 10th day, compiling all field data, weather reports, and actual travel times, the SAR commander concluded there was no logical fall point that could explain both leaving the trail without traces.

Crater Lakes terrain, though rugged, typically leaves a chain of indicators if hikers slip or have accidents.

But the absence of any signs left investigators facing a paradox.

Two experienced adults with basic hiking knowledge, vanishing completely in an area hard to conceal evidence.

On the 12th day, Ser was forced to announce the end of large-scale search operations, shifting to passive monitoring mode with small teams deployed only on new leads.

The missing person’s file for Evan Carter and Lily Hartman was then officially moved to cold case status, archived under code CRL15092 with all unexplained data from camera footage, interview reports to search and rescue search logs, closing nearly 2 weeks of fruitless pursuit, and leaving a void that lasted years with no new developments until the morning of May 7th, 2022, nearly 7 years after the case went cold.

That silence was suddenly broken when Highway 62 south of Crater Lake recorded an unusual report around 6:18 a.m.

A produce delivery truck driver in Prospect spotted a man in extreme exhaustion staggering along the roadside carrying no personal items and repeatedly collapsing while trying to walk.

The driver stopped about 30 m away, describing the man as looking like he’d just escaped from somewhere not meant for humans with a torn shirt, calloused hands, long hair, uncontrolled beard growth, and a gaunt face so emaciated that the initial reporter thought he might be a victim of an assault or a severely depleted homeless person.

The driver called 911 immediately and just 8 minutes later, the first Jackson County Sheriff’s unit arrived on scene.

Approaching the man sitting against a metal guard rail, breathing heavily and not responding coherently to initial assessment questions.

Rapid response medical personnel confirmed the man was severely dehydrated with unstable heart rate, low blood pressure, and signs of prolonged weight loss rather than acute exhaustion.

They requested transport to the nearest medical facility, selecting Rogue Regional Medical Center due to its capability for suspected long-term missing persons or complex trauma cases.

During transport, the man uttered only scattered words, mostly incomprehensible whispers, and provided no name when medics attempted to assess alertness through verbal response.

However, once secured on the stretcher, he suddenly clearly said two words, Evan Carter, repeating it a second time with barely any strength left.

The statement was clear enough for medics to note in the initial report, but the ambulance crew could not confirm identity before cross-checking with authorities as the man’s physical condition differed vastly from the 2015 missing person’s file.

Upon hospital arrival, he was temporarily registered as adult male, possible Evans C, for initial testing and to activate protocols for contacting investigative agencies in case of ties to pending files.

Since the man carried no ID, phone, or identifying items, hospital security immediately contacted Jackson County Sheriff for information cross check.

While urgently sending identification photos through internal systems to Crater Lake National Park law enforcement, the unit previously handling the Evan Carter and Lily Hartman disappearance.

Upon receiving the images, NPS immediately noted similarities in facial bone structure and a small scar under the left eyebrow, matching family provided descriptions from 2015, despite the current face being so gaunt as to be distorted.

The sheriff requested the hospital isolate the victim’s area and limit access, preparing for possibilities of criminal involvement or need for external protection.

Within 30 minutes, a small NPS investigative team coordinated with Jackson County Sheriff was dispatched to Rogue Regional Medical Center for long-term missing person identification verification.

They brought copies of file CRL5092, including 2015 photos of Evan, identification details, medical records, and stored DNA cross reference from the 2015 case.

While investigators discussed with hospital administration, medical staff documented the victim’s condition nearly 35% weight loss compared to 25 file data.

Skin with multiple long dark indentations like restraint or binding marks, broken nails in many places, uncontrolled long hair and beard indicating prolonged lack of care, and numerous old and new scars intermixed on arms and back.

One attending physician described the condition as not consistent with prolonged outdoor survival, but more like someone who lived for years in a restricted movement and light environment.

When investigators were permitted into the ER room, they directly compared 2015 photos to the man receiving IV fluids.

The clearest matches were the left eyebrow scar, a small right-hand scar from a prior work accident, and slightly offset lower jaw structure.

Though the victim’s face was so emaciated as to be hard to recognize, basic metrics indicated high probability this was Evan Carter.

The man who vanished without trace with his wife on Watchman Peak Trails 7 years earlier.

Jackson County Sheriff immediately notified Crater Lake NPS of the likely long-term reappearance case.

Simultaneously, file security lockdown was activated.

shifting from cold case to active investigation as biometric confirmation proceeded.

Basic victim information was entered into Oregon State Police Systems for federal missing person’s cross check.

Meanwhile, the man briefly opened his eyes long enough to react to the investigator’s presence, but could not answer questions.

The hospital reported the victim needed stabilization time before statement taking, but authorities had sufficient grounds for formal verification.

By late morning, when DNA comparison with 2015 stored samples showed perfect match, all doubts were eliminated.

The man found on Highway 62 was indeed Evan Carter, the victim missing without trace for 7 years.

Evan’s survival and reappearance in this extraordinary condition immediately shattered the case’s long deadlock, forcing authorities to re-examine all prior assumptions.

Immediately after the identity was officially confirmed, the report was urgently forwarded to the Jackson County Sheriff and simultaneously sent to Crater Lake National Park law enforcement, reactivating case file CRL5092 and returning the matter to active investigation status at the federal level.

Around 3:40 p.m., representatives from the sheriff’s office and NPS held a video conference call with Evans family and Lily’s family to convey the verified information.

The conversation was brief but filled with emotion and shock as the families had spent years preparing themselves for the likelihood that both were no longer alive.

NPS also informed them that the case had been transferred to the FBI in accordance with protocol for long-term missing person’s cases with potential links to serious criminal activity.

Following the initial notification, the FBI Portland field office took full receipt of the 2015 case files, including scene reports, SAR data, witness interviews, surveillance imagery, and all internal notes unsealed under the new investigation order.

The entire file was entered into the FBI’s major case management system with the classification changed from missing person type two to potential criminal deprivation of liberty, meaning the case was no longer treated as an unexplained disappearance, but shifted fully to a criminal investigation direction involving organized crime or prolonged unlawful restraint.

Within the first 24 hours after identity confirmation and inter agency FBI analysis team, including behavioral experts, environmental forensics specialists, forensic pathologists, and field investigators, was assigned to reconstruct Evans 7-year absence timeline based on tangible evidence collected at the hospital.

They began with preliminary medical data.

Severe malnutrition, muscle atrophy consistent with prolonged multi-year deterioration, profound vitamin D deficiency, indicating extended time in an environment lacking natural light, and parallel scarring on wrists and ankles consistent with periodic or frequent restraint.

A forensic pathologist noted scattered small scars on the back and upper arms of relatively uniform size, suggesting repeated exposure to a sharp object without sufficient force to cause deep injury.

This was incorporated into the timeline as an indicator of a controlled living environment rather than spontaneous accidental injury.

From this, the FBI developed a preliminary model of the potential captivity period, hypothesizing that Evan had been isolated from open space for a very long time.

Additionally, traces on his hair and unusually long beard led the forensics team to estimate that his last grooming had occurred at least 3 years prior, establishing a midpoint marker in the timeline.

Another analysis came from the behavioral experts.

Evans avoidance of bright light upon arrival in the ER and instinctive flinching at loud noises even while unconscious were key indicators that the victim may have lived in a dark or soundrestricted environment for an extended period.

The FBI structured the timeline into three phases.

Initial phase from the disappearance date to the onset of acute physical depletion.

Middle phase when the body stabilized at a minimal sustenance level and repeated injury patterns emerged and final phase when malnutrition accelerated in recent months evidenced by dehydration, cracked skin, and electrolyte imbalance.

Parallel to the medical evaluation, the investigation team collected all identification related evidence from the hospital, including soil residue on pant cuffs, small wood shavings under fingernails, fine wood dust in hair, and synthetic fiber traces on the collar.

All samples were sealed per protocol, and sent to the FBI laboratory.

Although results were not immediate, the team used initial descriptions to supplement the timeline, particularly noting environmental factors potentially linked to deep forest areas, temporary structures, or concealed buildings.

Another unit was tasked with reconstructing the possible route Evan took to reach Highway 62 based on his physical condition and mobility in a weakened state.

Preliminary conclusions indicated he was unlikely to have walked more than two, three miles without assistance or without having just escaped from a confinement site relatively close to the highway.

The FBI also reviewed the 2015 file for unresolved leads, an old ATV trail with faint K9 scent detection, an abandoned cabin not thoroughly searched due to bad weather, and secondary trails outside the original search perimeter due to unsafe terrain.

All were returned to the priority list, pending sample cross matching from the hospital to identify initial search sites.

Upon formal reactivation of the case, the FBI notified NPS that the matter had been reclassified as an active federal investigation, meaning all information regarding Evan from the time of his reappearance would be under strict monitoring and confidentiality.

Evans family was requested not to have direct contact until he stabilized and underwent initial psychological evaluation to ensure future statements would not be influenced.

By the end of the day, although Evan’s 7-year disappearance timeline was only in draft form, the collected data was sufficient for the FBI to completely rule out the possibility that he voluntarily left the park, lived as a vagrant, or suffered a prolonged accident in the natural environment.

Instead, all signs pointed to systematic prolonged control of which Evan himself was the victim.

To determine the nature of that control, the investigation team shifted focus to medical analysis, and the detailed report completed two days after Evans admission became the first foundation for reconstructing the confinement conditions he may have endured during his seven missing years.

During full body X-rays, doctors identified multiple injuries occurring at different times, a healed rib fracture with misalignment estimated 3 to 5 years old.

two minor fractures in the left forearm, consistent with direct impact, but not strong enough for complete breaks, and an old crack in the right footbone, now filled with bone tissue and painless, but showing clear signs of recovery without proper care.

These injuries all bore characteristics of repeated trauma in a restricted environment, non-fatal, but cumulative over time, and when compared to data from long-term captivity cases, showed similarities to victims with limited mobility or repeated impact against hard surfaces.

Regarding nutritional status, the medical team noted significant debilitation with BMI below severe deficiency threshold combined with near total loss of subcutaneous fat in the abdomen and thighs, a marker commonly seen in individuals subjected to restricted rations over many years.

Blood tests revealed extremely low vitamin D levels reflecting near total lack of sunlight exposure over an extended period along with prolonged B12 and iron deficiencies leading to chronic anemia.

These factors were incompatible with prolonged outdoor living as sunlight activity and varied food sources would mitigate such conditions.

Conversely, they are typical in victims confined in spaces lacking natural light with forced or monotonous diets.

Skin examination revealed multiple overlapping scars on wrists and ankles, mostly faded old scars interspersed with newer marks from a few months to a year old.

The characteristics of these marks, diagonal or parallel, varying depths, suggested restraint with the same type of material but at different long-term intervals.

Additionally, old bruising on the back and upper arms had discolored and was painless, distributed in characteristic horizontal bands, indicative of repeated strikes with a blunt object.

Some other scars were thin and long, resembling abrasions from rubbing against metal or hard surfaces without the defensive pattern seen in natural accidents.

When compared to typical injury profiles of long-term captivity victims in similar cases, the forensics team noted significant overlap.

Prolonged restraint scarring, time layered injuries, and persistent bruising without major fractures are common in controlled confinement environments not intended for immediate fatality.

One point emphasized by doctors in the report was the condition of leg and back muscle atrophy.

major muscle groups showed nearly 40% reduction compared to 2015 anthropometric data.

This was not indicative of someone moving frequently or wandering in the wilderness, but reflected confinement in a small space with restricted natural movement.

The degree of atrophy combined with weakened knee joints suggested Evans standing or walking time was likely controlled, possibly forced to sit or lie for extended periods.

Additionally, analysis of skin on the neck and shoulders revealed small arcshaped calluses typically formed by repeated tightening of restraints or fixing devices over short but recurring periods across months or years.

Taken together, all these indicators pointed in the same direction.

Evans suffered not only malnutrition and lack of care, but lived long-term in an enclosed lowlight space with minimal movement, frequent contact with metal or hard surfaces, and multiple phases of repeated minor but prolonged injury.

The forensic pathology team also provided an injury life cycle assessment by stratifying them into three main groups.

very old injuries, mid-period injuries, and more recent injuries.

The simultaneous presence of all three groups allowed the conclusion that Evan did not experience a single traumatic event, but a prolonged pattern cycle.

When all this data was cross-referenced with injury patterns collected from prolonged captivity cases in other states over the past two decades, the degree of match in injury distribution was high enough that the investigation team no longer doubted that Evans seven missing years were tied to a structured form of captivity rather than random or natural circumstances.

The final medical report laid a clear foundation for the next investigative direction by confirming undeniable physical evidence that Evan Carter had been held under strict prolonged confinement conditions with injuries bearing typical characteristics of a controlled enclosed environment with restricted mobility.

On that basis, immediately after the medical evaluations were completed, the investigation team moved to the psychological analysis phase to clarify the extent of mental trauma and behavioral signs resulting from Evan’s period of captivity.

When exposed to bright light in the examination room, Evan exhibited prolonged squinting, slightly turning his face away from the light source and sometimes closing his eyes completely despite non-hazardous light levels, indicating prolonged lack of adaptation to normal brightness environments.

During transfers between rooms, reactions to loud noises were also clearly noted.

Whenever a door slammed or an object fell unexpectedly, Evan instinctively curled up, raised his shoulders, and slightly leaned to one side, a response commonly seen in victims who lived in environments where sudden sounds were associated with threat or punishment.

Ability to handle open space was also significantly impaired.

When moved from the ER to a treatment room with large windows, Evan continuously stared at the floor, avoided looking outside, and only moved when guided step by step by medical staff.

The psychology team recorded this as a typical reaction in individuals previously confined to small, dimly lit spaces where restricted room size and low light became the new perceptual norm, making open areas overwhelming.

In basic cognitive tests, Evan struggled with short-term tasks involving simple sequences such as recalling three words after a few minutes or describing the order of three consecutive actions.

However, recognition of people, objects, and surroundings remained normal, indicating intact long-term memory, but degraded short-term memory due to prolonged stress.

Memory gaps were most evident when the team asked him to describe specific timelines over the past seven years.

Evan could recall sensations or sounds, but could not link them to dates, seasons, or years.

This phenomenon was classified as trauma- related memory disorder, where unclear day, night cycles, and monotonous environmental repetition prevented the brain from building consistent time markers.

The experts continued by creating a traumab-based behavior map for Evan, analyzing mental responses in three main categories: protective reflexes, compliance reflexes, and avoidance reflexes.

In protective reflexes, Heaven showed curling up at loud noises, instinctively covering his head with hands when objects suddenly appeared in view, and slightly tilting his head away when someone approached from an unseen direction.

These are prominent behaviors in individuals who lived in conditions where sudden sound or movement was often accompanied by pain or punishment.

Compliance reflexes were identified when Evan almost never stood or moved on his own initiative unless instructed.

In some tests, he sat motionless, waiting for further direction without asking questions or expressing alternative desires.

This aligned with behavioral conditioning models where victims are trained to minimize unrequested actions.

Avoidance reflexes were noted when Evans sought to sit near walls, avoided the center of the room, avoided direct eye contact when stressed, and constantly monitored the door location despite no present threat.

Experts described this as typical of victims who lived in environments where the door was the trigger point for the appearance of a controller.

Several stress tests using simulated sounds consistently showed Evan’s heart rate spiking suddenly at heavy footsteps, turning door locks, or metal clanging, three sound types commonly associated with enclosed confinement spaces.

Regarding social cognition, Evan retained the ability to process simple information and answer direct questions, but all responses were brief, minimally descriptive, and sometimes repeated similar sentence structures, indicating speech minimization, a trait often seen in individuals whose speech was controlled or communication restricted for long periods.

Experts also noted hypervigilance beyond normal levels.

Evan tracked medical staff movements with his eyes, even while lying down, and reacted subtly when someone approached from behind.

In layered diagnosis, the expert team identified three primary indicators for captivity severity, duration indicator, control severity indicator, and sensory deprivation indicator.

When compared to collected data, Evans scored high on all three duration long enough to create deep reflex changes.

high control severity reflected in compliance behavior and signs of sensory deprivation evident in light and sound reactions.

The combination of these three factors led the expert team to a unified conclusion that Evan Carter exhibited all characteristics of a victim of prolonged captivity under strict controlled conditions with behaviors and reflexes conditioned over many years living in an enclosed environment.

After completing the initial psychological evaluation, the investigation team began collecting statements from Evan using procedures designed for victims with fragmented memories, focusing on sensory information and details not reliant on temporal sequencing.

In the early sessions, Evan could only provide scattered memory fragments related to the space where he had been held, but the investigators noted that this was characteristic sensory data, which tends to remain more stable than memories tied to timelines.

Evan described the surrounding space as very small and not tall enough to stand upright in some areas, leading the investigators to note the possibility that he had been in a room or structure with limited height.

When asked to describe contact surfaces, Evan repeatedly mentioned the cold feel of metal, especially when his back or shoulders touched the walls, and a slight vibration in the floor, as if something was operating nearby.

The investigation team recorded these elements as measurable environmental features, metal surfaces, mild vibration, and confined space details that help orient toward the type of structure rather than a specific geographic location.

Meanwhile, memories of daily routines or time cycles were almost impossible to collect.

Evan could not recall when he slept, when he was fed, or how many hours were in a day, consistent with cases of confinement in dark spaces or environments deprived of temporal cues.

When asked about Lily, Evan provided consistent descriptions across multiple sessions.

Shortly after the initial abduction phase, the two were separated and he could only hear Lily from another space through the wall or some small gap, especially when she cried or had prolonged coughing fits.

He did not clearly remember how many times he saw Lily after the separation, but he recalled that she was no longer in the same room and that their only contact was primarily auditory.

The investigation team collected these descriptions as indirect evidence of confinement in separate but adjacent rooms likely separated by metal walls or solid partitions.

Regarding other sounds, Evan mentioned heavy footsteps, the metallic clang of doors opening, and occasionally the sound of heavy objects being dragged across the floor.

He could not describe the sources of these sounds, but could distinguish between sounds from above and those from the hallway or adjacent room.

This detail was noted as a clue, suggesting a multi-level structure or a separate corridor system.

When asked to describe the feel of touching the walls or ceiling, Evan described a slightly rough surface, not wood and not like concrete, prompting the investigation team to include materials such as steel, aluminum, or lightweight alloys in their list of possibilities.

When cross-referencing the memory fragments, the investigation team created a facts versus memory gaps table, dividing the data into three categories.

what Evan remembered clearly, what he remembered sensorally, but could not identify the source of, and what was completely unreoverable.

Facts included sensory details, confined space, metal surfaces, echoes from above, slight floor vibration, low temperature, and separation from Lily while still hearing her from a nearby space.

Memory gaps included the route to the confinement location, how he was abducted, the number of times he saw Lily after separation, and time cycles, all undetermined.

The uncertain impressions group included details Evan repeated, but was unsure about, such as the feeling that the room had two different floor levels or occasional unpleasant damp smells, like from old water soaked materials.

Although the memories were incomplete, the investigation team assessed these sensory details as particularly valuable because they are typically not distorted by the passage of time in the same way as event-based memories.

From the initial sessions, the investigation team concluded that Evan had been held in a type of enclosed structure with metal surfaces, likely part of an older system or renovated facility.

And more importantly, the immediate separation from Lily, indicated that the captor intended complete control over their behavior and communication.

All this data was entered into the analysis file for continued cross-referencing with ongoing physical forensic sources.

Concurrently with collecting sensory statements, the environmental forensics team began analyzing all samples taken from Evan’s body and clothing to identify geographic indicators that might suggest the location where he had been held.

Since Evan was found without shoes, the forensics team collected soil samples adhering to the skin of his feet, under his nails, and on the remaining edges of his pants, while also taking dust and mineral particle samples accumulated in his hair and beard.

Preliminary results revealed a small amount of dark red granular soil characteristic of skoria, a volcanic rock found only in certain areas of Crater Lake.

When compared to the park’s geological map, the analysis team determined that this red skoria layer matched the area west of the lake, particularly the old volcanic foothills extending toward Union Peak, where the geology is dominated by eruptive volcanic rock and compacted ash.

This was the first point that helped narrow the suspected area.

Microbial samples taken from Evan’s skin and hair continued to provide critical data.

The samples contained strains of fungi and bacteria indemic only to the lava bed system near Union Peak.

Clear evidence that he had direct contact with the damp enclosed environment.

Typical of ancient lava tube areas.

These strains are not widely distributed and exist only in the subsurface voids of volcanic rock layers, specifically lava tubes or longstanding geological cavities.

This data was quickly added to the analysis table, shifting the search focus to the southwest crater lake area.

Additionally, mineral testing in the hair showed evidence of prolonged exposure to water high in silica and with mineral content above average for surface water consistent with shallow wells in the Pomus desert, an area between Crater Lake and the western forest ranges.

Given the characteristics of water sources there, combining volcanic ash, pummus dust, and dissolved minerals in the soil, this result indicated that Evan not only passed through, but likely used this water source over an extended period, meaning the structure where he was held was near or within range of regular access to this type of water.

The convergence of three layers of environmental data, red skoria, endemic microbes, and hair minerals, all pointing to the same area, allowed the environmental analysis team to significantly narrow the suspected range.

Instead of the entire western rim of Crater Lake, the targeted area was reduced to approximately 20 to 30 square kilm centered around the edge of Pomus Desert and the forest branches between Union Peak and lower elevation trails.

The investigation team added this data to the file to build an environmental distribution map marking areas that possessed all three characteristics.

Red skoria soil, potential lava cavities, and mineralrich water sources.

The first tier forensic analysis not only directed the search area, but also clearly confirmed that Evans confinement environment was tightly linked to the distinctive geology of a remote, sparsely visited deep forest region with many forgotten natural or man-made structures, ideal conditions for concealing and maintaining an isolated site over a long period.

On that foundation, all results were forwarded to the second tier environmental forensics team where pollen, trace elements, and synthetic materials adhering to Evans clothing and hair were analyzed in greater detail to further narrow the geographic range with higher precision.

Pollen was the first key indicator.

In samples collected from the hair and collar, the analysis team found pollen grains from three characteristic plant species, most notably from pinus attenuatada, a sparsely distributed pine that heavily releases pollen only during a 2 to 3 week period in July each year.

This allowed the investigation team to determine that Evan had direct exposure to an environment containing this species relatively recently, no more than one year before being found.

The other pollen samples belonged to a brush grass species growing around dry land areas concentrated on the edges of Pummus desert, reinforcing the hypothesis that Evan was held within the western forest range where geology, microbiology, and vegetation all matched the samples taken from his body.

After pollen analysis, the forensics team moved on to examining fabric fibers adhering to the wrist cuffs and collar lining of Evans clothing.

Two types of fibers were found.

One was polyester cotton blend with coarse threading belonging to the category of materials commonly used in military blankets from 1995 2005.

The other was thin but tough synthetic fiber characteristic of small diameter binding cords or ties previously used by military and engineering units.

The military blanket fiber suggested a living environment enclosed enough to use old blankets or bedding, while the synthetic cord fiber reinforced the assessment that the confinement structure was equipped or retrofitted with industrial materials likely related to surplus military supplies.

Since Crater Lake once had numerous facilities and storage depots from the 1940s to 1960s, the investigation team added this detail to the file as a supplementary qualitative factor regarding material origin.

Another data point came from analysis of rust metal particles found in Evans hair and under his fingernails.

Under microscopy and spectroscopic testing, these metal particles revealed lowcarbon steel of older vintage with prolonged oxidation signs and trace phosphate characteristic of steel used in door frames and metal cladding from mid 20th century constructions.

Comparing against the National Park Service material database, the analysis team found significant similarity between this metal and that used in certain abandoned bunker storage or semi-ubteran structures around the park’s western area.

This aligned with the sensory information Evan provided about metal walls, slight floor vibration, and sounds echoing from above, all consistent with the characteristics of an old steel structure.

When combining the three data groups, seasonal pollen, fibers suggesting old military origin, and rust particles from vintage structures, the environmental analysis team built an overlap map of the factors, marking areas that simultaneously met all three conditions.

Initially, the suspected area from tier 1 analysis spanned 20 30 km, but with tier 2 results, the range was reduced to only about 57 km.

The circled region had unified geological features, red skoria soil, presence of lava beds, seasonal vegetation matching the pollen samples, and recorded prior old structures no longer under active NPS maintenance.

In particular, two areas on the western edge of Pummus Desert fell within the full analytical overlap, becoming the focus of the next investigative direction.

The analysis team completed the tier 2 report by ranking the compatibility level of each area, producing a list of highest probability points based on physical data, and forwarding all information to the field investigation team for on-site evaluation.

Narrowing the suspected range to just a few square kilometers marked a pivotal shift in the investigation as the location where Evan may have been held for many years was identified for the first time based entirely on objective physical analyses.

From this milestone, the field investigation team coordinating with the National Park Service officially launched ground surveys within the 57 square kilometers area west of Pummus Desert, focusing on remote forest sections that once contained semi-ubter facilities and auxiliary structures abandoned since World War II.

NPS provided original maps of bunkers, shelters, and ammunition depots built in the 1940s for training and testing purposes.

Most of these structures had been buried, filled in, or forgotten after the war ended.

However, archival records showed that some points had not been reserveyed in recent decades due to difficult terrain and prioritization of natural preservation over reinspection of old structures.

The investigation team used these maps to cross-reference with the suspected range, marking points that over overlapped or could contain man-made structures underground.

After paperbased cross-referencing, the technical team deployed ground penetrating radar systems to scan the surface of key areas.

GPR detects changes in material density, voids, or subsurface metal outlines beneath soil and rock.

On the very first scanning day, GPR identified several anomalies at depths of 2 4 meters, including parallel straight lines and strong reflection patches consistent with flat metal surfaces or artificial walls.

One area approximately 300 m wide showed uniform void signals suggesting the presence of a large chamber or three-dimensional structure hidden underground.

This result was regarded as the most significant discovery since the search was restarted.

In another area, GPR also detected scattered reflections from individual flat metal plates partially covered by soil, possibly debris or collapsed roof sections from old structures.

The technical team marked all anomalous locations, prioritizing the area with the strongest and most uniform reflections for deeper investigation.

During surface checks around the GPR points, the investigation team discovered old ATV tire tracks on hard ground, faded, but still recognizable with characteristic off-road tread patterns.

Upon analysis, technicians determined these tracks were not recent, but years old, yet followed a repeated travel route over time.

Notably, this ATV route did not appear on the park’s authorized trail maps, meaning it was not a legal path and likely created or used by individuals to access a restricted area.

The proximity of these ATV tracks to the anomalous GPR signals immediately elevated them as factors increasing suspicion.

From this information, the field team delineated a remote triangular forest section connecting three points.

the strongest GPR reflection site, the clearest ATV track location, and a natural terrain depression often used to conceal entrances to old bunkers.

The selected area was less than one square kilometer, but highly isolated, surrounded by dense forest layers with low undergrowth, making access difficult without clear intent.

The investigation team drew a detailed diagram of the area, marking all feasible approach directions and conducting surface surveys for possible camouflaged or partially buried entrances.

They examined manually cut tree trunks, unnaturally placed rocks, areas with soil compaction signs, and zones with differing vegetation growth, all common indicators around long concealed structures.

The manual sweep lasted many hours until one investigator discovered a patch of soil with different color and compaction compared to surroundings, suggesting prior excavation or refilling.

Beneath this soil layer were fragments of rotted wood mixed with foliage consistent with materials once used to cover hatches or reinforce bunker entrances.

This was deemed the most suspicious point and the team decided to bring in small excavation equipment for vertical probing.

As the soil layer was removed, the outline of man-made materials gradually emerged in the form of old wooden planks matching the type used in WWE era semi-ubter constructions.

At that point, the command team decided to pause for additional equipment while establishing a security perimeter to protect the suspected site before proceeding with regulated deep excavation.

All data from the field survey, old bunker maps, GPR signals, ATV tracks, and surface soil structure differences were compiled into an interim report confirming that the remote forest area west of Pummus Desert contained at least one man-made structure beneath the ground and was likely connected to Evan Carter’s 7-year disappearance.

The process of accessing the underground structure began as soon as the investigation team was fully equipped with specialized digging equipment and established a safety perimeter around the suspected trap door area.

The technical team proceeded to carefully remove the surface soil layer to avoid damaging materials or disturbing any remaining traces.

As the layers of soil and decayed leaves were gradually cleared, old wooden planks became clearly visible, indicating they had been intentionally used as a covering surface rather than being a natural part of the environment.

These wooden planks were rotten and brittle, but still retained their basic structure enough to recognize the characteristic rough mortise and tenon joints typical of materials used to conceal trap doors in semi underground structures from the WW era.

After removing the wooden section, the investigation team discovered a heavily rusted metal frame lying horizontally beneath the ground, suggesting it was the buried entrance that had been overtaken by time.

A section of hinge was still recognizable, though most of it had been oxidized.

The technical team used pry bars and small lifting equipment to open the metal hatch, taking nearly 30 minutes due to its heavy weight and the corrosion that had nearly fused the frame to the surrounding soil.

When the trap door was fully open, a vertical corridor appeared, supported by old steel and leading downward via a narrow metal staircase.

Moisture from below rose noticeably, carrying the distinctive smell of materials sealed for many years.

The investigation team activated specialized lighting systems and began descending, moving step by step cautiously to ensure structural safety and avoid disturbing traces.

On the first level, directly below the trap door, the space opened into a room approximately 124 square me in area with walls and ceiling made of joined metal panels.

Many areas corroded but still retaining their shape.

This was identified as the primary detention cell because it featured numerous signs matching Evans sensory descriptions.

Confined space cold metal walls, scratches and abrasion marks on the metal surfaces along with traces of restraints fixed to steel hooks on the walls.

The floor had a slight vibration when the team moved across it, consistent with Evans description of a sensation like the sound of machinery from deep below.

In one corner of the room was a low metal bed frame without a mattress, only a tattered old fabric layer along with an empty metal container that may have been used for holding water or simple storage.

All these details matched Evans sensory memories of a dark, cramped, and lightless detention cell.

Near the wall area, the investigation team recovered old nylon restraints already beginning to decompose, but still identifiable in fiber structure and not style.

On the walls, they found uniform strided abrasion marks, suggesting repeated rubbing by a hard object, likely from the restrained movements of a person’s hands or feet.

In the room’s corner, a small curved metal fragment was found, possibly detached from a wall panel, consistent with the slightly rough surface Evan recalled feeling against his back.

After completing documentation and photographing the scene, the investigation team proceeded to the second level via a narrow staircase leading to a short hallway.

This level was larger and identified as the living area for the bunker’s operator.

The space showed signs of prolonged use, an old wooden table, numerous metal storage containers, a makeshift kitchen area with traces of old ash and empty food cans.

The dirt floor here had thick layers of dust, but still revealed regular movement patterns, indicating the bunker user had lived there long enough to create familiar pathways.

In one corner, the investigation team discovered a handmade calendar on a wooden board marked with repeating symbols in weekly or monthly patterns of unclear meaning along with tally marks made by a sharp object.

These symbols were documented as evidence of disciplined activity or timetracking habits by the captor.

On the wooden table surface, deep cuts and indentations indicated it had been used for processing objects or repairing tools.

Scattered metal scraps, nails, screws, and synthetic bindings were found, some matching the types of materials recovered from Evan, directly linking the bunker to the physical traces on his body.

Another corner of the second level contained a series of old food storage containers, mostly rusted, with labels from manufacturers dating back many years, showing the bunker user maintained minimal supplies.

The investigation team continued to the third level, the smallest area containing numerous stored or abandoned items.

This was identified as a temporary storage area due to its infrequent layout, lack of natural light penetration, and absence of regular living signs like those on the second level.

The storage held large metal items such as old iron grates, empty gas cylinders, and various wooden pieces once used for structural reinforcement.

Some items appeared to have been removed from other parts of the bunker and stored here.

On the dirt floor was a layer of ash fragments and partially burned materials, suggesting the area had been used to dispose of small items or waste.

During a thorough sweep, the team detected circular arcshaped abrasion marks on the floor, possibly from dragging heavy metal objects or handpulled tools.

Several segments of synthetic rope scattered in the corner were also collected as evidence.

particularly because the material matched fibers found on Evans clothing.

Once the entire three-level structure was inspected, the investigation team compiled detailed records of each location, photographed the scene, and collected all evidence potentially linked to the detention process.

After comparing the bunker space to Evans memory descriptions, the investigation team noted strong matches, cramped cell, metal walls, slight floor vibration, narrow corridors, upper level echoes, and operator footsteps along with a layout of living and storage areas fully consistent with what Evan recalled through sensory impressions.

By discovering and accessing this bunker, the investigating authorities entered a critical phase in identifying the location where Evan had been held for an extended period while providing clear physical evidence to connect his fragmented memories to a real underground structure completely isolated from the outside environment for many years.

Immediately after completing the survey of the bunker’s first level, the area identified as Evans detention cell, investigation team moved to the adjacent compartment that had not yet been examined in detail and quickly realized it was not a living area, but a second detention cell of similar size with a different layout.

Upon entering, the forensic team noted the presence of several dark brownish stains adhered to the metal walls and floor distributed unevenly in blotches, suggesting dried blood.

Samples were immediately taken using specialized swabs with positions marked by scaled rulers and directional lighting to preserve the scene.

Preliminary on-site testing with phenol fail in reagent showed positive reactions for hemoglobin at several spots, confirming human blood before samples were sent to the lab for DNA analysis.

In addition to the blood traces, the investigation team discovered a long scratch on the north wall panel showing signs of strong repeated abrasion with a slightly concave curve consistent with impact from a hard object or direct force.

The distribution of these marks did not overlap with those in Evans cell, indicating different activity or events occurred here compared to the first detention room.

While continuing to scan the room floor, one investigator found a small hard object wedged between two metal floor seams, a bone fragment only a few millimeters in size, but with distinctive shape.

The sample was carefully collected, sealed, and prioritized.

Subsequent lab testing confirmed it was human bone specifically from a finger failank due to its small size and slight brittleleness.

It was assessed as belonging to an adult with relatively long decomposition time.

This was high value forensic evidence supporting that the second room was where another victim had been held or a serious injury event occurred.

On the walls, the investigation team also found other indented areas in the form of reverse bruise marks, signs of strong impact against the metal surface.

These marks were at heights consistent with an adult standing upright, but restrained in place and did not match positions typical of self-inflicted injury from falling or slipping.

Forensic experts concluded that this type of damage often appears in violent incidents in confined spaces where the victim was pushed or slammed into the wall with enough force to leave marks without deforming the metal structure.

While continuing detailed examination of the southeast corner, the team recovered a small personal item, a simple silver earring lightly oxidized but still retaining its shape.

The item was immediately cross-referenced with assets recorded in the 2015 missing person file and based on family descriptions, it matched the type of jewelry Lily Hartman wore daily.

In addition to the earring, the investigation team found a small strip of dark blue fabric caught on a protruding nail at the wall base.

The size and color matched the lightweight jacket Lily wore on the morning of her last appearance on Rim Village camera footage.

The fabric sample was collected and confirmed as polyester cotton blend, matching the jacket in the original file.

This discovery strongly reinforced the hypothesis that the second detention cell was where Lily had been held.

Under the room floor, the forensic team found additional circular and elliptical discoloration spots identified as old stains from liquid absorbed into the metal before fully drying.

Some also tested positive for blood in preliminary checks.

Specialized lighting was used to trace the flow paths of these stains, showing they extended from the room center toward the wall with the strongest indentations.

This suggested a direct link between violence and bleeding injuries in the confined space.

When sampling air from the lower room level, a small amount of residual volatile organic compounds was detected, though at very low levels due to elapsed time.

Some decomposing organic compounds were identified as once belonging to soft tissue, further supporting that the room was the site of an event leading to serious injury or death.

From all collected evidence, the forensic team began building an injury profile linked to the detained victim.

DNA analysis results from blood samples matched the reference sample of Lily Hartman stored in file CRL5092.

This confirmed Lily had been in this space and bled there.

Combined with the fingerbone fragment, personal items, and reverse impact marks on the walls, the investigation team concluded the room was not only a second detention cell, but also the site of high-level injury events.

To estimate time of death, the forensic team analyzed decomposition factors in the bone sample.

Slight brittleleness, off-white color, and mineral structure indicated decomposition over many years, consistent with four to six years prior, corresponding to the latter half of the disappearance period for Evan and Lily.

Additionally, dried blood on walls and floor no longer contained intact hemoglobin, but only oxidized iron traces, showing it had existed long enough for natural chemical decomposition cycles.

When cross-referenced with Evans disappearance timeline and his memory of hearing Lily cough persistently before suddenly going silent during an unclear period, the investigation team reached a preliminary forensic conclusion that Lily died in the bunker’s second room at a time falling approximately 3 to 5 years before Evan was found.

All this data was entered into the file as critical evidence showing the second room was not only a detention site, but also the location of fatal injuries with full physical evidence and environmental signs proving Lily Hartman’s presence and death during her disappearance.

Identifying the individual potentially responsible for the bunker and the detention process began immediately after the investigation team completed documentation of the second detention cell with clear physical evidence showing Lily’s presence and death in the structure.

The investigation focus shifted to tracing the person capable of building, maintaining, and operating a three-level underground bunker deep in the forest for many years without detection.

The first lead came from the old ATV trail discovered during field survey.

Based on tire tracks and soil depression, technicians concluded the route had been used regularly over many years, but not recently, indicating the ATV operator traveled the area during the period overlapping Evan and Lily’s disappearances.

Tire marks were cross-referenced with databases of off-road vehicles recorded at Crater Lake, including unauthorized entry incidents, trail violations, and reports of unidentified ATVs from 2008 to 2018.

Three reports documented sightings of a plateless ATV traveling deep into the West Pummus Desert Forest during summers of 2012, 2014, and 2015.

Notably, the ATV’s direction in all three reports matched the route leading near the bunker.

A match the investigation team flagged as high suspicion level.

Combining this data, the team expanded tracing by requesting NPS provide all footage from forest cameras in the western park boundary area.

Though Crater Lakes camera network was not dense, some wildlife monitoring cameras still captured human activity.

Reviewing data from 2014 to 2017, analysts discovered repeated images of an older Ford F-150 pickup.

Gray blue in color, appearing multiple times on the Northern Maintenance Road, an area often seasonally closed and accessible only to park staff.

The truck appeared at irregular times, but mostly late afternoon, and notably, cameras captured it turning into unmapped forest areas.

Images were blurry but sufficient to identify the classic 1990s design along with no front license plate common for some older F-150s where owners removed plates for technical reasons or deliberate concealment.

Investigators narrowed vehicle registration data for Ford F-150s in Clamoth, Jackson, and Dashes counties from 1995, 2022, focusing on individuals living isolated or with histories of unusual behavior reports.

From the large list, they filtered by criteria.

Residents near the park’s western edge, unstable tax records, low social interaction, and recorded presence on non-public forest roads.

During cross-checking, one name stood out.

Raymond Hail, born 1969, officially residing in Chiloquin, Oregon, but with no social activity records since 2007.

Public data showed Hail worked as an independent mechanic specializing in generators, steel frames, and off-road vehicles.

Skills matching maintenance of an old bunker and rusted metal trapdo system.

No tax filings for over a decade.

No renewed driver’s license, but two reports from Chiloquin residents in 2013 and 2014 describing a long-haired reclusive man who bought large quantities of canned goods and rope at local stores before leaving in an old Ford pickup.

When re-entered, the Chiloquin grocery owner described the man habitually purchasing specific items: nylon restraints, steel nails, canned reserve food, and metal water containers.

items fully matching samples recovered from the bunker.

The owner also noted the man paid cash, spoke little, and often avoided eye contact behavior typical of isolated individuals.

When cross-referenced with forest camera descriptions and unauthorized ATV trails, investigators noted significant matches in movement patterns.

A 1990 Ford pickup captured in 2015 showed bed surface dents consistent with hauling heavy materials or metal equipment highly compatible with bunker supplies.

Additionally, remote NPSGPS data, though not tracking individual vehicles, recorded signals from an unidentified device in restricted areas over multiple years, often during dry seasons when ATV or pickup travel was easier.

When completing the behavioral profile, the investigation team focused on traits, isolated living, use of older vehicle, no social contact, high mechanical skills, and movement patterns matching the bunker area.

Hail’s profile matched all criteria perfectly.

Notably, a minor 2009 report from a hunter near Chilikun Forest noted seeing a thin, long-haired man with oil stained hands near an unmapped trail turnoff.

The reported location was within a 3 km radius of the discovered bunker.

When synthesizing all data, ATV tracks, Ford pickup images, chiloquin witnesses, residence records, occupational skills, and scene physical traces.

The investigation team officially designated Raymond Hail as the primary suspect.

Step by step, the profile was strengthened by directly connecting links between Hail’s behavior, the disappearances of Evan and Lily, and the long-maintained underground structure.

Thus, after many years without leads, tracing backward from environment, behavior, vehicles, and identity brought the investigating authorities very close to the man who may have orchestrated the entire detention network deep in the remote western Crater Lake Forest.

Based on identifying Raymond Hail as the primary suspect, the FBI’s behavioral analysis unit proceeded to construct a criminal profile to explain how Hail selected, approached, attacked, and controlled victims over many years, thereby connecting disperate data points into a unified modus operandi.

Initially, the team examined the victim selection pattern within Hail’s operational range, drawing on reports of sporadic missing person’s cases in the Oregon forest area from 2008 to 2016.

Although there was insufficient data to confirm Hail’s involvement in all cases, several incidents involved young hikers traveling in small groups or as couples who disappeared near Crater Lake, particularly during summer or early fall periods, times when the terrain was easily accessible by ATV and when witnesses reported seeing hail in the vicinity of forest roads.

The investigation noted that hail tended to target victims unfamiliar with the terrain, typically tourists or firsttime hikers, to the park, which facilitated approach without leaving traces.

This aligned with the case of Evan and Lily, who visited Crater Lake on a short trip and lacked in-depth experience with the volcanic terrain.

Cross-referencing their disappearance timeline with hails movements further reinforced this environmental GPS records showed the presence of a signal from an unregistered vehicle device several kilometers from Watchman Peak on September 18th, 2015.

While forest cameras captured Hail’s Ford pickup at the Western Park turnoff just one day prior, the analysis team determined that Hail habitually moved in cycles, often appearing in the area from late afternoon to evening, suggesting he observed potential victims before attacking under reduced light conditions.

Based on Evans bodily injuries and evidence from the bunker, Hail’s attack method likely involved a stun gun to immediately incapacitate victims.

Minor wounds on Evan’s back and shoulders along with the pattern of initial neurological weakening during captivity suggested repeated low- voltage shocks, a technique commonly used by abductors seeking rapid control without fatal injury.

After stunning, Hail likely hooded victims with a cloth bag or similar material to prevent recognition of the transport, wrote, consistent with Evans fragmented testimony about being covered and unaware of the path.

The absence of footprints, belongings, or physical traces on the trail supported the hypothesis that hail launched surprise attacks at isolated points, then quickly moved victims to a pre-positioned ATV in the woods, completely avoiding main trail systems.

This matched the old ATV trail discovered during field surveys.

The route ran nearly parallel to the lower section of Watchman Peak, but far enough away to evade ranger surveillance.

The analysis team concluded that Hail employed a two-stage transport method.

First using physical force to move victims from the trail to the hidden ATV area, then driving the ATV along concealed forest paths to the bunker.

The ATV enabled flexible movement over rough terrain inaccessible to trucks while being fast enough to reach the captivity site before victims fully regained consciousness.

Transport pattern analysis also revealed that the bunker was positioned at a distance from trail areas large enough to avoid suspicion, but not so far as to complicate transport.

Consistent with the 57 square kilm radius narrowed during forensic work.

Once victims were inside the bunker, Hail’s control methods were clearly evident from traces in the cells and behaviors described by Evan.

One typical control strategy was victim separation, which Hail applied immediately to Evan and Lily.

Confining the two in separate rooms not only eliminated opportunities for cooperative escape, but also exerted strong psychological impact, preventing each from relying on the other.

This was reinforced by Evans testimony of only hearing Lily through the wall with no direct contact and this lasting for years.

Traces of restraints, activity logs, and injury distributions in both rooms indicated hail imposed a strict time-based control regimen, repeating cycles of wake times, feeding, and punishment to create a stable, coercive environment.

A captivity design aimed at maintaining absolute power and eroding victim resistance.

The use of narrow passages, cramped rooms, and limited lighting further amplified the psychological effects of confinement.

Additionally, wear marks on walls and ceilings showed hail routinely monitored or entered cells on a fixed schedule, likely to deliver food, check restraints, or perform other control actions.

The analysis team determined this matched a deliberate long-term abduction pattern, not impulsive, requiring meticulous preparation consistent with someone possessing mechanical skills, material knowledge, and the ability to maintain a bunker over extended periods without social contact.

When cross-referencing all data from victim selection patterns, movement routes, approach methods, transport techniques to sustained control rituals, the FBI concluded that Raymond Hail’s motus operandi was systematic, structured, and repeated over a long period.

All these analyses demonstrated that Hail’s behavior was not impulsive, but a deliberate predatory pattern, meticulously prepared, leveraging deep knowledge of forest terrain, and fully exploiting the isolation of Western Crater Lake to hold victims for years without detection.

Building on this established criminal profile, the investigation team moved to the next phase, reconstructing the entire seven years of captivity by integrating Evans fragmented testimony with environmental forensic data, physical evidence from the bunker, and Hail’s behavioral analysis to create a detailed phasebyphase timeline.

In the initial phase, estimated from September 2015 to early 2016, data showed Hail brought Evan and Lily into the bunker just hours after the attack, then quickly separated them into different cells.

Evan described waking to hear Lily crying and the sound of heavy objects being dragged outside the bunker hallway, consistent with the opposing cell layout found during searches.

Wear marks around the door frame of the second room indicated stronger initial resistance from Lily, possibly because she was dragged in while semi-conscious.

From restraint traces and wall markings, experts concluded this was the phase when hail applied the highest level of coercive discipline, lighting restricted to near total darkness, diet limited to canned rations, and irregular feeding times to disrupt victims biological rhythms.

During this period, skeletal and muscular injuries on Evan, including micro trauma to wrists, compression marks on ankles, and abrasion scars on shoulders, reflected prolonged immobilization with improvised restraints found in the cell.

Concurrently, in the second cell, clustered impact marks on walls during the first few months were forensically assessed as Lily’s initial resistance before physical decline.

Moving to the phase of Lily’s illness, estimated from mid 2016 to late 2017, the timeline was established by combining Lily’s skeletal analysis with Evans accounts of unusual sounds from the adjacent room.

Forensics revealed severe prolonged malnutrition with small rib fractures from intense coughing or prolonged spasms.

Evan recounted hearing Lily cough violently, dry heave, and later only dragging sounds, likely hail delivering water or food in response to her illness.

On Lily’s cell walls, vertical scrape marks at low heights, indicated she often sat leaning against the wall rather than standing, consistent with exhaustion.

This was also the phase when hail reduced fixed restraints, but increased activity schedule control.

Bunker activity logs, pages clipped together and marked with symbols instead of words, showed hail checked on Lily more frequently than Evan, likely due to her rapid health decline.

The timeline indicated late 2017 to early 2018 as the phase of Lily’s death.

Based on remaining tissue decomposition on discovered bone fragments, forensics estimated death in winter when bunker temperatures dropped low but not to full freezing, resulting in characteristic decomposition rates.

Evans stated that after a long period of no sounds from Lily, he noticed a strange odor spreading through the bunker’s ventilation, matching the WWI era vent diagram provided by NPS.

When piecing data together, investigators determined Hail did not immediately remove Lily’s body, but kept it in the bunker briefly, possibly due to weather or to maintain covert routines, only performing long-term relocation when safe.

Blood pooling traces under the wall base and small fragments on the second room floor, indicated Lily died in her cell, not relocated beforehand.

In the phase of Evans isolation from 2018 to early 2022, the timeline showed hail shifted to intense singleperson control with less direct contact but sustained feeding schedules, health checks, and intimidation to maintain submission.

Lily’s absence caused Evan prolonged temporal disorientation, evidenced by cognitive disorder analysis.

Bunker carvings with sharp objects along bed edges showed Evan attempted day marking but abandoned many segments.

During this time, Evan’s diet stabilized with fewer erratic changes explained by nutritional forensics via hair samples, slow but steady growth indicating low but consistent rations, not total starvation as in the early phase.

New injuries were minimal, mostly recurring old scars or skin inflammation from dampness and light deprivation.

The timeline revealed Hail gradually reduced direct contact frequency, perhaps since managing only one person allowed longer absences from the bunker.

Hail’s annual movement patterns were determined from three sources.

forest cameras, transactions for canned goods, rope, fuel in towns around Chiloquin and Fort Clamoth, and wear on the ATV trail.

Soil skoria samples from old tires in his storage matched multiple forest points, showing hail returned to the bunker seasonally, most often late summer, early fall, less in winter due to snowfall impeding ATV access.

Forest cameras recorded the Ford pickup regularly each year from 2016 to 2021 in non-public areas, proving continuous bunker management without prolonged abandonment.

When integrating all data, the 7-year captivity timeline became clear from initial separation.

Lily’s illness death prolonged isolation with Evan Hail’s movement cycles, ensuring bunker maintenance throughout Evans captivity.

The entire sequence aligned tightly with the established behavioral model, confirming the deliberate, calculated, and chillingly stable manner in which Hail sustained two victims over seven consecutive years.

The federal trial of Raymond Hail took place nearly a year after the forensic conclusions were finalized, opening with the presentation of the physical evidence system recovered from the bunker and on the victim’s body to establish a direct connection between Hail and the seven years of captivity endured by Evan and Lily.

The prosecutor displayed crime scene photos.

Binding ropes with fiber samples matching the coil of rope Hail purchased at a store in Chiloquin.

Shoe prints matching the type of boots found in his cabin.

An activity log recorded in repeating symbols reflecting the control pattern exactly as Evan described along with Hail’s DNA on food container lids, metal bowls, and on tools in the bunker’s living area.

The bone and blood sample comparisons in the second confinement room were presented as key evidence proving that Lily died within the detention structure operated by Hail.

A series of forensic experts explained the chain of injuries on Evan’s body using timelines to correlate stages of malnutrition, recurring binding marks, and neurological damage consistent with prolonged forced confinement.

This data helped the jury clearly see the continuity between medical evidence traces in the bunker and the 2015 disappearance timeline.

Next, the group of witnesses was called to the stand, starting with the salesperson from Chilquin, who confirmed selling rope, canned goods, and an ATV repair kit to a man matching Hail’s appearance on multiple occasions between 2015 2020, stating that he always paid in cash and avoided direct conversation.

A hiker witness from 2015 was recalled, confirming they had seen an old dark green Ford pickup parked near a forest trail not part of the main hiking routes, a detail matching later forest camera recordings.

The team of psychological experts showed the jury Evans behavior upon rescue, from flinching at loud noises to cognitive instability, all consistent with long-term trauma profiles rather than the result of voluntarily abandoning society, as the defense had implied.

The climax was Evan’s testimony, carefully prepared and based on a timeline already validated by forensics.

Evan described each phase of captivity from the moment of abduction, the time Lily fell ill, then died, and the prolonged isolation period.

The prosecutor continuously displayed forensic corroborations for each segment of Evans testimony.

For example, when Evan described the metal rattling sound at fixed hourly intervals, an expert presented an acoustic map of the bunker.

When Evan mentioned the smell of decay, environmental forensics provided gas analysis lingering on wall materials.

This testimony was considered particularly weighty because every detail Evan provided had been independently verified.

The defense began cross-examination by attacking the psychological angle, arguing that Evans memory was affected by the long confinement, making his testimony prone to distortion, and that some details might have been suggested during interrogation.

They called a counterexpert to discuss the phenomenon of memory reconstruction, arguing that environmental descriptions could not be absolutely accurate after years in darkness, and thus Evans testimony could not serve as central evidence.

However, the prosecution immediately rebutted by pointing out that environmental forensics, red skoria, soil, pollen, fabric fibers, abrasion marks, all existed objectively and matched Evans descriptions despite him having no ability to see the bunker from the outside.

The defense continued arguing that Hail’s DNA presence in the bunker did not directly prove the act of killing Lily, and that there might have been someone else who previously used this WWE structure.

The prosecution responded with a series of fingerprints, ATV tire samples, activity logs, and forest cameras, all indicating Hail’s continuous presence over the seven years with no trace of any third party.

In the most critical cross-examination, Hail was called to the stand at the defense’s request to create the impression that he had nothing to hide.

But when the prosecutor questioned specific details such as why Hail’s pickup appeared on an unauthorized forest access road, why his tires matched old wear marks leading to the bunker, or why his DNA was on all the utensils, Hail either refused to answer or claimed not to remember.

The contradiction between Hail’s silence and the physical evidence drew the jury’s attention.

The prosecution concluded its presentation by arguing that the entire body of physical evidence, forensics, corroborated testimony, and Hail’s behavior formed a coherent chain with no element standing alone and none that could be reasonably explained without the suspect’s direct involvement throughout the events from 2015 to 2022.

The trial moved to the final argument phase with a clear advantage leaning toward the prosecution as the core evidence had been presented to the jury with high detail and consistency.

After weeks of arguments and evidence presentation, the jury deliberation took place in a context where nearly the entire chain of events had been proven through a consistent forensic system and validated testimony.

The jury examined each group of evidence hails DNA in the bunker.

The truss’s depiction of better Seb in the bunker, wear marks and binding traces matching injuries on Evan’s body, Lily’s blood and bone samples, ATV tire tracks, images of a Ford pickup matching Hail’s vehicle, along with direct links between items found in the shelter and Hail’s purchases in Chiloquin.

They also considered the defense’s arguments about possible distorted Evan memories or a third-party involvement, but concluded that even if Evan’s entire testimony were disregarded, the volume of physical evidence was still sufficient to prove Hail maintained, used, and controlled the bunker throughout the period Evan and Lily were missing, and that no factor reasonably explained Lily’s traces in the confinement room without Hail’s direct intervention.

Based on this, the jury agreed that Hail’s actions fully constituted three serious charges.

First-degree kidnapping with the element of confinement lasting over 7 years, murder based on evidence that Lily died while unlawfully deprived of liberty and suffering severe injuries in an environment controlled by hail.

and aggravated abuse manifested through Evans confinement in inhumane conditions, lacking nutrition, without light, periodic binding, and layered injuries over many years.

When the jury returned to the courtroom, the verdict of guilty on all counts was announced without any dissenting votes, reflecting the convincing strength of the evidence system.

The prosecutor requested the maximum federal penalty, life without the possibility of parole, citing the exceptionally severe nature of the acts, the prolonged captivity, Lily’s death, and the permanent psychological impact on Heaven.

The judge, after reviewing the sentencing report, and noting Hail’s lack of remorse, approved the prosecution’s proposal.

In the sentencing portion, the judge emphasized that the brutality and systematic nature of the acts rendered Hail ineligible for any leniency.

Confining two victims in a three-level bunker, completely isolated from society and controlling everything from basic activities to movement was typical of intentional captivity rather than impulsive action.

The sentence of life imprisonment without parole was imposed for all three charges to run concurrently, ensuring Hail would never be released.

After sentencing, the court ordered Hail transferred to the highest security federal detention facility for safety while sealing all his assets to serve potential civil claims if Lily’s family pursued them.

The legal record of the case, which spanned from 2015 to the trial, was officially closed with the conclusion that Raymond Hail was the sole individual responsible for the abduction, confinement, and causing the death of Lily Hartman, along with the prolonged harm to Evan Carter.

This is regarded as one of the most significant sentences related to long-term captivity in the northwestern United States in decades with the full record preserved in the federal system for research and prevention of similar incidents in the future.

After the sentence for Raymond Hail was pronounced and the legal file officially closed, authorities shifted focus from investigation to addressing the long-term consequences the case left for the victims, families, and community around Crater Lake.

Evan Carter was transferred to a specialized PTSD treatment facility in Portland, where doctors combined psychological therapy, physical therapy, and cognitive rehabilitation to help him gradually adapt to life outside after 7 years in the bunker.

Evan struggled with sleep, often waking in the middle of the night at slight noises, and still flinched whenever bright light or sudden metal clanging appeared, deeply ingrained reflexes from his confinement.

In therapy sessions, he was guided through grounding and desensitization techniques to reduce hypervigilance, but the recovery process was assessed as prolonged and not fully reversible.

Heaven’s family maintained regular visits, but all interactions were supervised by psychological experts to avoid triggering traumatic memories.

Meanwhile, Lily Hartman’s family held a solemn memorial service in their hometown in Washington after receiving the forensic conclusions and the remaining bones handed over by the FBI.

The ceremony was attended by the local community and some SR personnel who participated in the 2015 search, emphasizing that Lily’s death was not forgotten despite years of silence.

The family established a small fund in her name to support missing person’s search efforts in the Northwest, turning loss into positive community contribution regarding Crater Lake National Park.

The case forced the NPS to review all safety procedures and deep forest management.

They updated warning signs at major trail heads, adding information about less traveled areas and risks of encountering unauthorized individuals using ATV trails.

The NPS also increased patrol frequency during peak tourist seasons and installed additional forest cameras in areas where Hail’s vehicle was previously detected to prevent anonymous activity by any individual in the future.

Additionally, old WWI structures, including bunkers, semi underground depots, and tunnels were reinspected to ensure no forgotten structures could be exploited for criminal purposes.

The incident also left a strong impact on the hiking community and residents around Crater Lake.

Many hiking groups organized meetups to share safety experiences, stressing the importance of reporting itineraries before trips and not going alone into dense forest areas.

Some volunteer organizations collaborated with the NPS to develop digital maps marking high-risk zones using data from the case as a typical example of unpredictable risks in Oregon’s unique terrain.

Meanwhile, residents of Chilikin and Fort Clamoth continued to bear heavy psychological effects because Hail had lived in isolation near them for years without anyone suspecting he was operating a confinement bunker deep in the forest.

Some who had encountered Hail expressed guilt for not recognizing unusual signs from his habits of buying canned goods, binding ropes, and metal tools.

Though in reality, it was very difficult for an ordinary person to connect those behaviors to a 7-year crime.

Community workshops were held to alleviate this feeling and guide how to recognize risk signs in daily life.

On a broader level, the Evans Lily case became an important study in the field of missing persons investigation and long-term captivity in the US.

FBI training incorporated the environmental forensic analysis, skoria, pollen, rusted metal, microorganisms into the curriculum as an example of integrating material data with fragmented testimony to locate confined victims.

In the national park sector, the incident prompted reforms in trail management, monitoring individual behavior and forests, and maintenance of old structures.

Although Hail’s sentence closed the legal file, the case’s impact continued to spread in the tourism community, park management, and investigators for years afterward.

For Evan, the recovery journey remained challenging, but family and expert support helped him gradually rebuild life after 7 years of lost freedom.

For Lily’s family, the irreparable pain of loss persisted, but uncovering the truth and bringing the perpetrator to justice was an important step for them to move forward.

Crater Lake, though still one of the most beautiful natural sites in the United States, forever carries the mark of the case, a reminder of the fragility of safety in wild mountain forests and the importance of vigilance, preparation, and community cooperation in preventing similar tragedies in the future.

The story of Evan Carter and Lily Hartman is not just a complex criminal case, but also reflects many issues present in contemporary American life.

Complacency when exploring wild nature, limitations in national parks monitoring capabilities, and especially the hidden dangers from isolated, hard to control individuals like Raymond Hail.

details such as Evan and Lily hiking without fully reporting their itinerary or hail existing for years in the forest with an old Ford pickup without anyone noticing are clear reminders of the fragility of personal safety in vast natural environments.

The case shows that despite the development of NPS forest cameras and patrol networks, there remain monitoring gaps that an experienced terrain individual can exploit.

Just as Hail used unauthorized ATV trails to access and operate the bunker for years undetected.

From the perspective of someone living in the United States today, the lessons from this story are very specific.

When entering wild environments from Crater Lake to Yusede or state parks, thorough preparation is not just safety advice, but personal responsibility.

Reporting itineraries to family or friends, going in groups, using offline GPS apps, and saving local emergency numbers are simple steps that could have significantly reduced risks in Evan and Lily’s case.

Additionally, the story emphasizes the importance of community vigilance toward unusual signs.

For example, Chiloquin residents seeing hail by binding ropes, canned goods, and unusual items, but no one thinking they could relate to a prolonged crime.

This does not mean baseless suspicion.

Instead, it encourages reporting observed unusual behavior in wild settings because authorities monitoring systems are truly effective only with community support.

Finally, the story reminds us that captivity victims like Evan need long-term patience and societal support.

His years of PTSD treatment reflect the reality that psychological wounds cannot heal just through a trial.

What each individual can do is build a supportive, understanding environment and reduce stigma toward trauma survivors because that is also an important part in creating a safer and more humane community for America today.

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Thank you for joining until the end of Evan and Lily’s journey and see you in the next meaningful and cautionary