Montana
How did Montana teen Danni Houchins die? Her family’s decades-long search for the truth
It was the end of September 1996, a Saturday night in a fishing area just outside of Bozeman, Montana — a place of tranquility until this night.
A few miles up a rural highway, near the small town of Belgrade, searchers discovered the body of 15-year-old Danielle “Danni” Houchins.
Peter Van Sant: What brought your sister Danni down to this area back on September 21st, 1996?
Stephanie Mollet: Well, that morning, uh, we had, kind of a family spat.
Stephanie Mollet is Danni’s little sister.
Stephanie Mollet: And so, she got 15-year-old mad about it and needed some space and some time, and she had her driver’s license.
Peter Van Sant: Now, people wonder how does a 15-year-old get a driver’s license?
Stephanie Mollet: In the state of Montana in 1996, you actually got your driver’s license at 15. … she was a very proud driver, so —
Peter Van Sant: She hops into her Chevy pickup truck and —
Stephanie Mollet: Yeah. Gets and –
Peter Van Sant: Why would she come to this place if she wanted to just kind of take a break?
Stephanie Mollet: It’s peaceful.
After Danni’s pickup truck was located, a sheriff’s posse had searched this wilderness for Danni until it got too dark. But that same night, two brothers, friends of the Houchins family, refused to call it quits.
Peter Van Sant: So they came down this very path —
Stephanie Mollet: Yeah.
Peter Van Sant: — at night, with their flashlights?
Stephanie Mollet: That’s right.
Peter Van Sant: They would’ve crossed this bridge, right —
Stephanie Mollet: Mm-hmm.
Somehow, in the dense, muddy woods, they found her body.
WHAT HAPPENED TO DANNI HOUCHINS?
Keith Farquhar, then a deputy with the Gallatin County Sheriff’s Office, was the first officer on the scene. In the first hours after Danni was found, no one was really sure what had happened to her.
Peter Van Sant: Did this look like an accident scene or something else?
Keith Farquhar: Something entirely different … there’s nothing here then or now that would suggest a 15-year-old girl should, all of a sudden, be face down in a small amount of water and mud and be dead. She’s a mountain kid.
Peter Van Sant: And is it possible to put into words the shock and horror of that moment?
Stephanie Mollet: It’s like everything you knew doesn’t exist anymore … to not understand how that could have happened and to just feel a gaping hole in your whole being.”
Rachelle Schrute went to school with Stephanie and Danni.
Rachelle Schrute: And I always thought Stephanie and Danni were super cool. … Danni was like my friend’s cool older sister.
Rachelle Schrute: They were the most down-to-earth, friendly people.
The sisters loved the Montana wilderness.
Stephanie Mollet (gesturing outside): This is like a nature playground out here and our family, we just played.
Peter Van Sant: A classic … Montana girl, right? She could fish. She hiked. She could ski.
And Danni was smart.
Stephanie Mollet: She loved science. She was so interested in the way that the world worked.
Peter Van Sant: And she had a sense of humor, right?
Stephanie Mollet: Uh, yeah.
Stephanie Mollet: She was witty and she was funny, and everyone loved her. … she’d make humor at her own expense.
Peter Van Sant: How quickly did words spread that Danni had been found and that she was dead?
Keith Farquhar: Oh, like wildfire.
Rachelle Schrute: It was a lot of shock … You know, learning about Danni dying, it came in stages. You know, there were the rumors, all of a sudden, of somebody died. Initially I just heard somebody drowned.
While Danni’s family was awaiting an official cause of death, everyone it seemed — from first responder Farquhar to folks all over town — were speculating about what had happened.
Keith Farquhar: Small-town Montana. If you haven’t heard a rumor by 10 o’clock in the morning, you’re gonna start one.
Rachelle Schrute: The rumor started flying of … maybe it was a murder and then we’re all like, “what?”
And, if it was a murder, who would want to end this young girl’s life? And was there a killer on the loose?
Rachelle Schrute: It just was like this strange roller coaster of did someone … should we be worried as a community?
Stephanie Mollet: I think the rumor mill around Belgrade High School was ruthless.
Rachelle Schrute: There was so much other speculation. … I remember thinking, “Man, what if? What if?” … It just caused fear.
Stephanie Mollet: I tried to be strong. Danni died on a Saturday, and I tried to go back to school on Monday. I thought if — I thought that if I was strong, then it’d be easier for my parents. (emotional)
But within days, the family’s grief would turn to heartbreaking shock when they heard the sheriff office’s jaw-dropping announcement about how Danni died.
Stephanie Mollet: We just couldn’t believe what they told us. … It didn’t make any sense.
DANNI’S FAMILY PUSHES FOR THE TRUTH
Just two days after the discovery of Danni’s body, with the people of Belgrade fearful and demanding answers, authorities released the partial findings of Danni’s autopsy. They did not say Danni was murdered. Her manner of death was undetermined.
Her family was dumbfounded.
Stephanie Mollet: They told us that she drowned, and they told us that it really could have been an accident.
The sheriff told the media that there were no cuts or bruises on Danni’s body and no indications of foul play.
Stephanie Mollet: She could have just tripped and fell. We don’t really know.
Peter Van Sant: Tripped and fell?
Stephanie Mollet: Uh-huh.
Peter Van Sant: And as avid experienced outdoors people, even at 12, you thought that was absurd?
Stephanie Mollet: Absurd.
What the family didn’t know at the time, was the coroner said Danni had inhaled both water and mud into her airways. The family also didn’t know that there were bruises and cuts on Danni’s body.
And signs of possible sexual assault. The sheriff back then, Bill Slaughter, told “48 Hours” it is often common for investigators to withhold key details to protect their investigations as they looked into potential suspects — including people who were close to Danni.
Keith Farquhar: Common sense says this girl was not an accidental death.
Caught in the middle of this controversy was Deputy Keith Farquhar, then a young patrolman. He was assigned to work with detectives on the case. Farquhar spoke with Danni’s doctor.
Keith Farquhar: He … said there’s nothing about her physical condition that would’ve prevented that girl from being able to roll over in a few inches of water and mud to breathe, if she had just fallen, if this was an accident.
But when Farquhar tried to report the doctor’s opinion to other investigators —
Keith Farquhar: I was pretty much ridiculed … by the sheriff.
Peter Van Sant: What’d he say?
Keith Farquhar: He said, “what the f*** does a doctor know?” And that — that statement sticks in my mind to this day.
Bill Slaughter, the former sheriff, denies Farquhar’s allegations. He says Farquhar was a disgruntled employee and that his department never ignored any evidence.
Fed up and disillusioned, just three months after Danni’s death, Farquhar resigned from the sheriff’s office.
As years passed, Danni’s family tried to accept that her death might have been an accident.
Peter Van Sant: As all that time, weeks to months to years go by and you have no answers, what was that like?
Stephanie Mollet: Traumatizing. It was, uh, having a big wound in your life and this big gap that was unexplainable. And you somehow had to find a way to heal without answers, to live without resolution, um, to hope with no reason to hope.
Until 24 years after Danni’s death.
Matt Boxmeyer was a detective sergeant with Gallatin County. He took an interest in Danni Houchins and her family.
Matt Boxmeyer: I found out that they really hadn’t been given much information back in 1996 regarding the investigation, which is not uncommon. … with investigations, you know, you don’t openly talk about ’em with the family usually.
Matt Boxmeyer: They’d been told that she had … fallen down and — and drowned. It was marked as accidental.
Boxmeyer also found out that there had been several efforts over the years to get evidence analyzed by the Montana State Crime Lab.
But after each attempt, nothing. No usable DNA profile ever came back. So he was starting from scratch. Meantime, Mollet decided to turn up the pressure.
Stephanie Mollet: I had been calling the sheriff’s department … trying to get someone to talk to me about Danni’s case.
Finally, Boxmeyer and his bosses made a decision.
Matt Boxmeyer: They deserved some answers.
They told the family that Danni’s death was no accident.
Matt Boxmeyer: I shared with them that I believe that it was a homicide.
Mollet then demanded to read the autopsy and look at the crime scene photos.
Stephanie Mollet: I was so angry at the people who lied to my family, and let my sister’s murder go unsolved, but uninvestigated for all of these years.
Stephanie Mollet: I learned that rather than drowning on just water, Danni’s head had been held down in the mud … she had mud all the way down into her lungs and into her stomach. … there was subcutaneous bruising on the back of her neck … someone had held her head down forcefully. … there was, vaginal injuries. … there was semen in her underwear. … she had fought and scratched.
Peter Van Sant: This is like a — a nuclear bomb going off emotionally, I would think for this family and for you.
Stephanie Mollet: I remember asking them, “so you mean to tell me that in fact, my sister was raped?” And they said, “yes, we believe she was raped.” … I remember (sigh) not being able to breathe. I remember feeling like I needed to puke.
In 2021, with Danni’s family now knowing the explosive truth, solving Danni’s murder would become a top priority for newly appointed Sheriff Dan Springer.
Peter Van Sant: You were a rookie deputy when this crime came down, right?
Sheriff Dan Springer: Yeah. … Five days after I started is when we found Danni’s body.
Sheriff Dan Springer: When you become the boss, you get to decide to do things the way you want to do things. … I felt like, well, this is our time. Let’s go get some answers.
Sheriff Springer reached out to Stephanie.
Sheriff Dan Springer: And I told her … I am making a promise that we will find an answer to this case.
Now determined to set things right, Springer reached outside the department to a most unusual investigator: Tom Elfmont.
Tom Elfmont: I’m … very persistent … I have … a bulldog personality …
Tom Elfmont: I just don’t give up on something. I just don’t do it.
He’d spent a lifetime in tough jobs, from a soldier in Vietnam to a cop working the streets of LA.
Tom Elfmont: I wanted to put bad people in jail.
And after a conversation with Springer, he was also drawn to Danni’s case.
Tom Elfmont: She was a great kid. And the way she died — I get choked up about this a little bit, really, to this day, bothers me. And so, when they said, would you like to work the case? I said, “yes, I wanna work the case.”
Stephanie Mollet: I, of course, internet stalked him immediately and came to find out that he’s like the man that never retires.
Tom Elfmont: I told Stephanie, “I will solve this case, Stephanie.” And she said, “OK, I’m gonna trust you.”
And with Elfmont leading the way, he soon found a suspect.
Rachelle Schrute: Why do I know that name? Like, that sounds so familiar. … it took a little bit of time for it to go, “oh no, oh no.” … Oh, my gosh, no way!
AT LAST – A BREAK IN THE CASE
By mid-2023, retired-LAPD Captain Tom Elfmont was back to working full-time, committed to finding Danni Houchins’ killer.
Tom Elfmont: The only reason I stayed in it was Danni.
For Danni’s sister, Stephanie Mollet, Elfmont’s refreshing dedication, professionalism and enthusiasm was what the case had always needed.
Peter Van Sant: What does Tom do?
Stephanie Mollet: Tom got to work. Tom worked on Danni’s case every day. He went through and reexamined all of the evidence.
Elfmont had access to everything, including a list of potential suspects from the old case file and that previously tested clothing that Danni had been wearing when she was found.
Stephanie Mollet: He most importantly made sure that DNA got tested.
Elfmont asked the Montana State Crime Lab to use their newest technology to retest the semen on Danni’s underwear. At last, a breakthrough: a partial DNA profile. But there were no matches to names in the case file, and when Elfmont compared it to CODIS — the vast federal digital repository of DNA samples from convicted felons —
Tom Elfmont: We didn’t get any hits.
But Elfmont was undeterred and decided to go a less conventional route. He turned to genetic genealogy, and investigative genealogist CeCe Moore.
CeCe Moore: Since I started working with law enforcement in 2018, I’ve been able to help … solve over 325 cases.
Moore is an expert at building out family trees from DNA samples using information from popular genealogy websites – bringing cold cases back to life. But to solve this case, Moore needed a special type of DNA profile. Problem was, they didn’t have enough DNA from that semen.
CeCe Moore: We have to start from scratch, which means there has to be remaining biological evidence for us to go back and retest using more advanced technology.
Elfmont did have more evidence for retesting: four male hairs that had been found on Danni, which had been perfectly preserved for 27 years. They had never yielded any usable DNA because were “rootless” hairs – without any skin cells, but Elfmont asked around and connected with Astrea Forensics, a state-of-the-art private lab that’s at the forefront of extracting DNA from previously unattainable genetic matter.
As if there wasn’t enough drama in this case, the first two hairs Astrea tested produced nothing useable.
Peter Van Sant: So the last two hairs are examined, are they able to get a profile?
Tom Elfmont: Yes. In the last hair. … Oh, I was so excited!
It was a critical breakthrough. Elfmont got permission from a judge to compare this enhanced DNA profile to samples in popular genealogy databases, where people voluntarily submit their DNA profiles. By spring, 2024, Moore had what she needed to get to work.
CeCe Moore: I’m looking for patterns, commonalities, overlaps, eventually common ancestors.
Moore was able to identify the great grandparents on both sides of the suspect’s family tree. She then found one marriage that proved decisive.
CeCe Moore: The couple that I finally zeroed in on … they had a lot of children.
Including three sons. Moore felt like she had to be close, but there was a problem.
CeCe Moore: What was really confounding was that everybody lived in New Hampshire. … yet the mystery was what was the link to Montana?
Moore scoured through the birth indexes, marriage certificates, and even the social media of those sons.
CeCe Moore: When I finally got to the youngest son’s Facebook page, he had posted that he moved to Bozeman, Montana on July 1st, 1996.
Remember, Danni had been murdered in September 1996.
CeCe Moore: And finally, all the pieces fell into place. … On May 1st, 2024, I called up the detectives to let them know that I believed I had identified Danni’s killer.
Finally, after nearly 28 years, it was now time for Elfmont to call Mollet and give her the momentous news.
Stephanie Mollet: We’ve found Danni’s killer, and he is alive, and we are going to make a case against him.
The suspect was Paul Hutchinson, a married father of two, who, Elfmont soon learned, was widely known and respected in local hunting and fishing circles.
Tom Elfmont: We learned that he’s been working for the Bureau of Land Management in Dillon, Montana, for 22 years as a fisheries biologist. … He was a big outdoorsman, bow hunter, rifle hunter, fisherman, trapper.
And, incredibly, it turned out Mollet’s childhood friend, Rachelle Schrute knew Hutchinson. He was a trusted mentor who she had first met in the early 2000s.
Rachelle Schrute: Paul came across as … just an under-the-radar person that … was always so kind of calm and quiet. … He was just so utterly unremarkable.
“I KNEW WE HAD HIM”
Stephanie Mollet had spent years dreaming of the day someone would be held responsible for her sister’s murder. That day — that dream — seemed to be finally coming true.
Stephanie Mollet: It was the moment at which I knew that everything I had put into my fight for my sister had been worth it.
In September 1996, suspect Paul Hutchinson was 27 years old. He had served in the Marine Corps, then moved to Bozeman to study at Montana State University, just 13 miles from where Danni’s body was discovered.
Tom Elfmont: When he was at Montana State, he had a work-study … he worked for the Fish and Wildlife Service … which would have put him on the waterways around Belgrade.
Peter Van Sant: Where on September 21st, 1996, Danni ended up on a hike.
Tom Elfmont: That’s correct.
Peter Van Sant: Do you think your sister Danni knew Paul Hutchinson?
Stephanie Mollet: No. Paul Hutchinson was a stranger to Danni. … there’s no way that she would’ve known him.
But many people in the area did know Hutchinson, through his passion for hunting and fishing and high-profile government job.
Rachelle Schrute: He just was like this respected source of information in the hunting and fishing space.
Schrute knew Hutchinson for years. She’s an expert hunter and former Yellowstone park guide – and is now the Hunt & Fish editor for GearJunkie.com.
Rachelle Schrute: I think I would’ve considered him a — a friend. … you know if we were doing some sort of hunt camp, I would’ve not even thought twice about inviting him.
Schrute says she never once questioned Hutchinson’s integrity, even she went on fishing trips with him — just the two of them — out in the middle of nowhere.
Rachelle Schrute: I’ve always trusted my gut instinct when it comes to … especially men. … I never had any feeling that he was unsafe.
Though she hadn’t seen Hutchinson in years, Schrute kept up with him online. He would often post on message boards about hunting trips he had taken across the country.
Rachelle Schrute: Paul was super active in the hunting community. … It seemed like he was constantly hunting. … Always sharing where he was headed, or where he just got back from.
Hutchinson had no criminal record. By all accounts, he had been leading a quiet existence since 1996.
Peter Van Sant: And what did you know about his family life?
Tom Elfmont: Well, we knew that he had a wife, a daughter, and a son.
And he lived just a few hours away.
Peter Van Sant: And Dillon, Montana, how far is that from Bozeman?
Tom Elfmont: A hundred and forty miles.
Elfmont knew he couldn’t make an arrest until he got Hutchinson’s DNA — which he was working out how to get. In the meantime, Montana law did allow Elfmont to talk to Hutchinson with some conditions.
Tom Elfmont: It just basically has to be in a public area where he can walk away anytime he wants to.
So, on July 23, 2024, Elfmont and another detective drove down to Hutchinson’s office at the Bureau of Land Management in Dillon with a body camera rolling.
Tom Elfmont: We saw Paul come in and get out of his pickup … and then we started walking up … And I got up about 10 feet from Paul and I said –
TOM ELFMONT (bodycam): Hey Paul. How are you doin?
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Good.
TOM ELFMONT: Good. My name’s Tom Elfmont. … I’m with the Gallatin County Sheriff’s Office.
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Uh-huh.
COURT DEPWEG: Hey, guys.
They came ready with a clever excuse for why they wanted to speak with Hutchinson, hoping it wouldn’t raise his suspicions.
TOM ELFMONT (bodycam): We wanted to talk to you. … we’ve been talking to some fisheries people about some things that have been going on here at the rivers in Southwest Montana.
PAUL HUTCHINSON: OK.
Tom Elfmont: I explained to him that we’re investigating some cases up and down the rivers … And so we wanna talk to people that are experts.
Right at the start, they caught a break thanks to an unusually scorching hot day.
Tom Elfmont: It was 98 that day in Dillon. He said, let’s go inside.
PAUL HUTCHINSON (bodycam): You guys wanna come inside and talk?
COURT DEPWEG: That’d be great, man.
Tom Elfmont: If he invites us in, we don’t have to give him Miranda. So, we go inside, he takes us in a small conference room.
While they didn’t ask about Danni Houchins right away, Elfmont says he could tell Hutchinson was nervous.
COURT DEPWEG (bodycam): So, I appreciate you — sitting down with us.
PAUL HUTCHINSON: No, glad to help. Wha — What’s up?
Tom Elfmont: And he breaks into a sweat. It’s just his head starts sweating. … And he asked, can I — can I leave?
PAUL HUTCHINSON (bodycam): Um, can you gimme a second?
COURT DEPWEG: Absolutely.
Hutchinson said he had to go help a coworker. When he returned, they asked him about the other cases.
Tom Elfmont: So I had pictures of four women that died; one in a river in Idaho, two over on the Yellowstone, and then Danni.
Elfmont’s partner, Court Depweg, took over the conversation.
COURT DEPWEG (bodycam/shows photo of Danni): OK, this is Danielle Houchins.
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Mm-hmm.
COURT DEPWEG: She was — she was killed in September of 96.
PAUL HUTCHINSON: OK. …
COURT DEPWEG: And she was found … off the Gallatin River. Did you ever fish up there?
PAUL HUTCHINSON: I trapped on the Gallatin. …
COURT DEPWEG: Have you ever heard of the Cameron Bridge Access?
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Mm-hmm. (Nods to affirm)
COURT DEPWEG: Have you been there before?
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Probably, um, Jackrabbit Lane?
COURT DEPWEG: Yeah.
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Yeah.
COURT DEPWEG: Exactly.
Hutchinson had confirmed he had not only been to the remote area where Danni was attacked, he remembered the street that led there. Elfmont says it was a revealing exchange.
Tom Elfmont: He’s shaking. He’s all distressed now. … he was sitting back in the chair … as far as he could get from the table and the pictures. … I knew we had him.
COURT DEPWEG (bodycam): Do you remember seeing her there? Or a — a similar face?
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Um – I honestly don’t. I — I mean, I probably — I’ve been to a bunch of fishing access sites for one reason or another.
Hutchinson denied knowing anything about Danni’s death — even when they told him they had the suspect’s DNA.
COURT DEPWEG (bodycam): Is there a possibility that you were there when she was murdered?
PAUL HUTCHINSON: No. …
COURT DEPWEG: You weren’t trapping or anything during that time?
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Not in September. I would’ve been, you know — Are you — are you asking me? I mean —
COURT DEPWEG: I’m just asking if you remember anything –
PAUL HUTCHINSON: Oh, oh.
COURT DEPWEG: — during that time?
PAUL HUTCHINSON: No, no.
Peter Van Sant: Did you ever directly say, “did you kill Danni Houchins?”
Tom Elfmont: No.
Peter Van Sant: Why?
Tom Elfmont: Didn’t need to. … Didn’t need to. And —
Peter Van Sant: ‘Cause he knows that you know.
Tom Elfmont: That’s right. Yeah.
Peter Van Sant: And you know that he knows that you know.
Tom Elfmont: Correct.
As they wrapped up the interview, Hutchinson had a question for them.
PAUL HUTCHINSON (bodycam): Anything else you want to ask me while I’m here?
TOM ELFMONT: No, we’re good. We’re good now.
To Elfmont, it seemed like Hutchinson couldn’t believe they didn’t arrest him. But the investigation was far from over.
Tom Elfmont: So we walk out of the building and we had surveillance people to follow him. … He started driving like a maniac. … High speed, doing U-turns. … and he takes off.
A SISTER’S PROMISE FULFILLED
With the possibility of an arrest of her sister’s killer, Stephanie began imagining what justice would look like for Paul Hutchinson.
Stephanie Mollet: I was preparing myself for the next three to five years of a court battle to … staring him down, to being present every day in that courtroom.
But what Mollet could never prepare herself for was the startling phone call she got from Elfmont just 12 hours after he had interviewed Hutchinson.
Tom Elfmont: So I called Stephanie … And I said, “Stephanie … (long pause) he’s dead, he killed himself. … It’s a big pause. And she said, “you know, I don’t know how I feel about that.” I said, “I get it. I understand.”
Police say Hutchinson drove to a remote area and called the sheriff’s dispatch line, saying an officer needed help.
When cops arrived, they found Hutchinson’s body — dead by a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He was 55.
Peter Van Sant: Give me a sense of that moment for you.
Stephanie Mollet: Shock. I — I didn’t expect that to happen.
When Hutchinson’s DNA was checked against evidence from Danni’s body, including the semen on her underwear, there was match.
Tom Elfmont: The ratio? 10.7 trillion-to-one. So he was the guy.
Peter Van Sant: This case is solved.
Tom Elfmont: A hundred percent.
Mollet’s friend, Rachelle Schrute — who had considered Hutchinson a mentor — learned what happened as she watched the sheriff’s news conference.
Rachelle Schrute: I am gutted. I’ve known him most of my life. … Like, it makes me mad to know him. … How dare you!
At the news conference Mollet thanked the current sheriff’s team.
STEPHANIE MOLLET (to reporters): I’d like to express my family’s gratitude to Tom Elfmont for overcoming every roadblock … To Dan Springer, thank you for being a man of your word.
And then, she did what no one there expected. She unleashed years of pent-up anger.
STEPHANIE MOLLET (to reporters): The sheriff … lied to my parents … bold-face lied and betrayed the trust of shocked and grieving parents. … those institutions failed my sister, failed my family, and failed this community.”
“48 Hours” asked Springer about Mollet’s allegations that the sheriff’s department, for years, had lied to her family.
Peter Van Sant: If what they say is true, were they lied to?
Sheriff Dan Springer: I don’t — I — I don’t know what they said, to be honest.
Peter Van Sant: What the parents said is that they were told that their daughter did not have any injuries. … If what they are saying is true —
Sheriff Dan Springer: Yeah.
Peter Van Sant: — were they lied to?
Sheriff Dan Springer: Oh, of course. I mean, I think the — the reports speak for themselves, there were marks on her body and if that’s what they were told, then that’s not the truth.
“48 Hours” reached out to the man who was sheriff in 1996, Bill Slaughter, now retired. Slaughter admits withholding some information from Danni’s family, but claims he never lied to them despite the fact he told the local newspaper in 1996 that there was no indication of foul play.
Weeks after the news conference, Mollet went back to the scene of the crime.
Stephanie Mollet: When I finally saw the exact spot where her body was found and I sat there and imagined that, about her last moments and how it went from peaceful rusting of leaves and, you know, the sounds of squirrels running through the forest and the birds chirping to suddenly turning to this awful and violating and terrifying experience … And then that realization that she must have had when he was holding her face down in the mud, that she was gonna die right there. … And I am so sorry for her, that she had to experience that moment.
Peter Van Sant: For you, what is this case about?
Tom Elfmont: Danni. It’s about Danni. … I would wake up at night, and I would say, middle of the night, 3 o’clock in the morning, and I’d say, “Danni, I got you.” It’s about Danni.
the most troubling, says Elfmont, “were there other victims?”
Tom Elfmont: Oh, I think there’s a good possibility. Yeah.
Stephanie Mollet: I think that anyone who is able to rape and murder a young girl and then get away with it for almost 28 years had plenty of chances to do it again.
Mollet is now trying to make changes in how Montana funds and supervises law enforcement, so that cases like Danni’s don’t fall by the wayside.
Stephanie Mollet: On the table, I have … what was in Danni’s pocket when she died. … And then her driver’s license, which she was really proud of having.
Years ago, Danni’s family spread some of her ashes on a nearby mountain top.
Stephanie Mollet: We spread half of Danni’s ashes on top of the tallest mountain on the Bridger Range, Sacagawea Peak.
And now, almost 30 years later, Stephanie was back on the banks of the Gallatin River, where Danni died to spread the last of her ashes … and to tell her sister that she’d made a difference.
Stephanie Mollet: I love you Danni.
Stephanie Mollet: I think the biggest thing has been, after so many years of begging and pleading for people to pay attention to my sister, for people to believe that she mattered. I’m feeling so often like I was screaming into an echo chamber. Now, suddenly she matters to everyone all over again.
Produced by Chuck Stevenson and Lauren Clark. Ryan Smith is the development producer. Michael Baluzy, Wini Dini and Gregory Kaplan are the editors. Anthony Batson is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.
Montana
Proposed Bridger pipeline would bring crude from Canada through Montana to Wyoming
The Bridger project is a massive oil pipeline project that would come in from Alberta, Canada, into Montana at Phillips County, then go through nine counties before getting to Wyoming.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Montana Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) are reviewing the project, and it could cut across private, state, and federal land.
Watch Bridger pipeline story here:
Proposed Bridger pipeline would bring crude from Canada through Montana to Wyoming
The 647-mile-long Bridger pipeline would move up to 550,000 barrels of crude oil a day.
“It’s a win for Montana. It’s a win for America,” said Yellowstone County Commissioner Mark Morse.
Morse and the Yellowstone County commissioners are among the many Montana leaders supporting the project.
Just this week, they drafted a letter to the Bureau of Land Management expressing that support.
“The energy security is again, it’s going to be on the North American continent and transporting oil via a pipeline is safer than rail or truck,” Morse said.
Commissioners also say the pipeline would be an economic boost for Yellowstone County, bringing construction jobs, supply contracts, and local spending.
“We’ll be a hub for their construction activities,” Morse said. “Supplying parts and pieces, labor.”
But there are plenty of opponents.
They say the risks are simply too high, pointing to past oil spills, including the 2015 Poplar pipeline rupture that sent 30,000 gallons of crude oil into the Yellowstone River near Glendive and a diesel spill of 45,000 gallons near Sussex, Wyoming.
“If that crossing has spilled into the Missouri River, it eventually would make it to that intake,” said Lance Fourstar, co-director of the American Indian Movement Montana. “Highly carcinogenic tar sand bitumen, so we already know it’s highly carcinogenic.”
Fourstar also has concerns about sacred tribal lands.
“The key point of concern is the sovereignty and treaty rights,” Fourstar said. “This project crosses lands, that with treaty reserved rights, hunting, fishing, and gathering.”
The Montana Environmental Information Center (MEIC) says the pipeline would originate in Alberta with what it calls environmentally destructive fuel sources.
“It’s an environmental disaster waiting to happen in a state that gets a lot of revenue from fishing and agriculture. A majority of the route crosses through Montana, putting land and water at risk,” MEIC spokesperson Shannon James said in a telephone interview with MTN News.
But for Yellowstone County leaders like Morse, it’s a win-win, not just for Yellowstone County, but also the country.
“I just see energy independence for America,” Morse said.
MTN News contacted True Companies in Casper, which proposed the Bridger pipeline.
True and BLM were not available for interviews.
Montana
Walker Hayes to headline 2026 Northwest Montana Fair
KALISPELL, Mont. — Country music star Walker Hayes will headline the 2026 Northwest Montana Fair concert, opening the Northwest Montana Fair & Rodeo in Kalispell.
Hayes is scheduled to perform Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2026, at the Flathead County Fairgrounds. The 2026 Northwest Montana Fair & Rodeo runs Aug. 12-16.
Hayes is known for hit songs including “Fancy Like,” “AA,” and “You Broke Up With Me.”
“We are thrilled to bring Walker Hayes to the Northwest Montana Fair,” said Sam Nunnally, Manager of the NW Montana Fair & Rodeo. “Our goal each year is to create unforgettable experiences for our community and visitors, and this concert will be a highlight of the 2026 Fair.”
Tickets for the Walker Hayes concert will be available through the Northwest Montana Fair website at nwmtfair.com.
The Northwest Montana Fair & Rodeo welcomes more than 80,000 guests annually and is one of the largest summer events in the region, featuring concerts, PRCA ProRodeo action, carnival rides, exhibits, food vendors, and family entertainment.
Montana
GOP congressional candidates Aaron Flint and Al Olszewski face off in Bozeman
BOZEMAN — Aaron Flint and Al Olszewski, Republican candidates for Montana’s Western District U.S. House race, squared off Tuesday in their party’s only scheduled debate before the party primary.
The two debated for about 90 minutes at Bozeman’s Calvary Chapel before an audience of about 120 people. Bozeman anchors Gallatin County, which is second in Republican votes only to Flathead County within the 18-county district.
Natural resource jobs, affordable housing and U.S. military attacks on Iran dominated the discussion. Each question drew 12 minutes of response. Both men called for an end to stock trading by members of Congress, and for federal budgets to be passed on time through regular procedures.
The Montana GOP sponsored the debate. Candidate Christi Jacobsen, Montana’s secretary of state, was unable to attend, according to state Republican Party Chair Art Wittich. State Senate President Matt Regier moderated.
Among the highlights: Flint mentioned no fewer than eight times that he is endorsed by President Donald Trump. Olszewski mentioned Trump by name only a couple of times.
Never too far from Flint’s talking points were “far-left socialists,” whom he credited for “gerrymandering” the Western House District (which has delivered comfortable wins for Republicans since first appearing on the ballot in 2022). The 2026 election cycle was the target of Democrats on the state’s districting commission, Flint said. (Both Democrats on the commission that drew the district in 2021 voted against its current configuration.)
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The near faux pas of the night came during Olszewski’s discussion of good-paying jobs in trades and natural resources: “Trades jobs, natural resource jobs, you know, high-dollar, white-collar jobs, our remote workers who have moved into Montana, and we’ve adapted an economy around them. You know, these are the people, and those are the jobs that will bring our kids home, those high-paying white-collar jobs, or a good natural resource job in western Montana, in one of those mines, or, you know, you know, a sawyer or a hooker” — big pause — “as in timber, not the other way around.”
The line that didn’t land: Flint tried and failed to get audience applause for the 2024 defeat of Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Tester by Republican Sen. Tim Sheehy — an unseating Flint campaigned for.
“How many of you out there are so glad that we finally got rid of the flip-flop, flat-top liberal senator, Jon Tester? How many of you are so glad we finally did that?”
After a silence, Flint explained to people watching the debate on Facebook that the audience was just being polite.
“They’re waving because we can’t have disruptions. See, they’re good rule followers here in the Republican Party,” Flint said.
Asked how to alleviate Montana’s housing affordability crisis:
Olszewski: “The only way you can afford an expensive house is you’ve got to have a job that pays good money. Tourist jobs provide rent and roommates. Trades jobs, natural resource jobs, high‑dollar white‑collar jobs … those are the jobs that will bring our kids home.” Dr. Al, as Olszewski is widely known, said Wall Street investment buyers are distorting housing prices and the federal government has weakened the dollar.
Flint: “Thirty percent of the cost of a home is all due to red tape and regulations … It costs $100,000 to build a home before you even put a hole in the ground.”
Flint said reviving Montana’s timber industry would lower home values and added, “I support President Trump’s ban on these big Wall Street firms buying single-family homes. I think that’s something that we’ve got to get across the finish line.”
“We can deliver when it comes to making the Montana dream affordable again by delivering affordable housing. But another piece is promoting trades and trades education to build up our workforce.”
Asked how Congress should respond to the Iran conflict:
Olszewski: “I supported our president with what happened in Venezuela. There’s a $25 million bounty on basically someone that was killing our people through drugs, right? I’m not so happy with what’s going on in the Iran war. I’m not a warrior. I’m a physician from the military that fixed military people … What my perspective is, is that countries can win wars, but people do not. They don’t come back.” Olszewski said Congress will have to decide whether to authorize further use of military force and set terms in about 10 days.
Flint: “Let me just say this. We are sick and tired of these forever wars, and we do not want to see a long-term boots-on-the-ground Iraq-style nation-building exercise, and I think President Trump shares that mission as well. Let me also say this about Iran. First off, [former Venezuelan President Nicolás] Maduro is behind bars. [Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei is dead, but the far-left socialists are on the march in Montana.”
Asked about reforming Congress:
Olszewski: “What our congressmen and congresswomen have to understand is that if you’re in the House, the House belongs to the people, and they need to, first and foremost, represent you, not themselves, not special interests. It’s not about sound-bites. It’s about actually getting work done and governing.” Olszewski said the House needs to pass a budget based on 12 agency appropriations bills before the end of each federal fiscal year, a process known as “regular order.”
Flint: “We need to return to regular order and get single-subject bills and get these appropriations bills done one by one. If they can’t get a budget done, they shouldn’t get paid. And we need a ban on congressional stock trading. Because I think part of the reason why the American people are so frustrated with Congress right now is because … they believe that Congress is so useless, because we’ve got some of these politicians back there that are getting rich off the backs of taxpayers.”
Neither candidate offered a plan for cutting taxes, once a staple of Republican platforms. Both supported reductions in federal spending without identifying particular cuts.
Voting in Montana’s 2026 primary election begins May 4 and ends June 2.
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