Missoula Notebook
Where is Barbara Bolick?
By Sutton Stokes, 6-18-08
| A 2007 photo of Barbara Bolick. | |
In a perfect world, it would have been impossible to forget the name of Barbara Bolick, the Corvallis resident who disappeared while hiking near Bear Creek, west of Victor, almost one year ago. In a perfect world, Barbara’s name would have been kept in front of us all this time, because in a perfect world it would have been impossible to get over this kind of mystery. It would have been incomprehensible that a 55-year-old mother of two could end up in the wind like this.
Of course it’s not a perfect world, and people disappear all the time. Unable as I was at first to remember Barbara’s name or the name of the place she disappeared from or any other very specific details from the posters I noticed around town soon after my arrival last August, it was an education to see how little use it is to perform a Google search for “missing woman Montana.” There are a lot of missing people, especially women, including an Anaconda woman who vanished less than a month ago, leaving her car full of groceries parked behind a bar.
As for Barbara Bolick, here is a summary of what was reported in the local media concerning her disappearance. On the morning of July 18, around 9 a.m., Barbara left home for a hike with Jim Ramaker, a friend of her husband’s cousin; the cousin and Ramaker were visiting from California. The group had been up late the night before, and neither the cousin nor Barbara’s husband, Carl, felt like joining the hike.
Before leaving, Barbara told Carl that she and Ramaker were headed for Bear Creek Overlook, a favorite spot of Barbara’s where she often took visitors to show them the view.
According to Ramaker, he and Barbara took the planned hike and stopped at the overlook for a snack. They stayed at the overlook for about a half hour before starting back down. Ramaker says he took a last look at the view while Barbara started walking.
He turned to catch up with her less than a minute later.
Barbara was gone and has never been seen again.
Ramaker walked back down to where a Forest Service crew was doing road construction near the trailhead and asked if the workers had seen Barbara. He and a crew member walked back to Ramaker’s car — still no sign of Barbara. Ramaker says he then walked back up to the overlook; the Forest Service crew saw him return about 90 minutes later, when he reported that he still couldn’t find the missing woman, and so someone called a ranger.
The implausibility of Ramaker’s story is one of the marks in favor of its being the truth. The area around the overlook is described in one news article as “lightly timbered,” the ground covered in shale fragments. Every footstep makes a noise, and there are few hiding places. But if Ramaker had been responsible for Barbara’s disappearance, couldn’t he have come up with a more believable story? Why not say that Barbara had fallen and injured herself, and that she disappeared while he walked back down to get help?
The official position of the Ravalli County Sheriff’s Department is that Ramaker is not a suspect, though a detective named Perry Johnson gave the Missoulian the decidedly ambiguous statement that “until something else happens — we find Barbara or find her body — I think he’s just a witness.”
At the time of the disappearance and for at least several months afterward, investigators were looking for two additional potential witnesses, a pair of young men who passed through the Forest Service work site about an hour before Ramaker first appeared looking for Barbara. The men were driving a Chevy Blazer with Missoula County plates and had a black and white collie with them.
Ramaker says that he and Barbara ran into these men on the trail. If so, they are the only people who can confirm that Barbara was in fact on the mountain that day, because Ramaker’s car was already parked at the trailhead — next to the Chevy Blazer — when the Forest Service crew arrived for work. But if investigators have ever located these two men, I can find no mention of it on-line. Articles also mention a “mountain man” who had been seen in the area, although investigators are not reported as ever actively looking for him.
Barbara was a small woman, about five feet and 115 pounds, and — though she habitually carried a .357 Magnum while hiking — her habit was to keep it in her backpack, where it would have done her no good in an emergency. Still, given the terrain at the overlook, it is hard to imagine that someone was able to subdue Barbara without Ramaker overhearing.
Easier is to imagine Barbara sneaking away and hiding, although if she had decided to leave her husband and start over, why not at least take her wallet and identification, which she had left at home? People do sometimes run away and adopt new identities, but to do so requires not only strong motivation but some very specialized knowledge, neither of which Barbara seems likely to have had.
Perhaps Barbara snuck away as a prank, intending to surprise Ramaker later on the trail or at the car, only to meet with some misadventure along the way. I haven’t spoken to anyone who knew her, so I can’t say if this would have been in character. My guess from reading the articles about her disappearance is that it would not have been.
So we are left to wonder what happened that day and whether Barbara is alive or dead. Her story is a reminder that no one is promised tomorrow and that you never know when goodbye means goodbye.
For more like this, read the rest of the Missoula Notebook.
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Comments
i nevr read that they combed beneath the overlook, have always had to assume that's so obvious they must have. were tracking dogs or carrion dogs ever tried?
still, that talk of silent dissapearnce: cougar rises.
According to an August 1st article in the Bitterroot Star, there were "night and day searches with four different helicopters, including Lifeflight and Careflight as well as a National Guard helicopter from Maelstrom Air Force Base in Great Falls and one from Homeland Security, also from Great Falls. A helicopter with forward looking infrared cameras was used in the night searches. Ground searches were also conducted by the National Guard, Homeland Security, U.S. Forest Service, as well as Missoula and Ravalli County Search and Rescue teams. Last Sunday, specially trained dogs were brought in from Missoula and Helena to search the area, but to no avail."
I don't know if the dogs were cadaver dogs, although I would hope that authorities considered this possibility.
i pray that Barbara decided to start a new life and walked out of the woods in the same condition that she walked in, but it definately smells of foul play.
I would hesitate to draw a "guns can't help" lesson here, since -- with her gun in her backpack -- Barbara essentially didn't have a gun with her, so she's not really a good example. Of course, even if she'd been wearing it on her hip, it is easy to imagine many situations where it might not have helped anyway, like suddenly finding herself rolling down a hillside with a big cat on her back. Still, if you're going to go to the trouble of buying and bringing a gun, why not carry it where it could do some good?
Sutton, in your research on this, did you ever come across any references to whether Ramaker or any of the family offered, or were asked to take a polygraph exam?
"In addition to precluding the direct introduction of the results of a polygraph test, it is the law in Montana that any evidence which would otherwise be admissible may be rendered inadmissible where a polygraph is used in the production of or for the purpose of influencing the outcome of such evidence. See State v. Craig (1993), 262Mont. 240, 242-43, 864 P.2d 1240, 1242-43. "
That phrase "influencing the outcome of such evidence" could allow a defense attorney a pretty broad brush to get evidence declared inadmissible. So I suspect law enforcement in Montana is very wary of using polygraphs for this reason.
Please note, IANAL (I am not a lawyer)
That is what is so baffling about Barb's disapperance and how many in depth searches were done on foot and by air...no the dogs did not pick up her scent and they were cadaver dogs highly trained and skilled in this area. Again that is also why it leads people to think she was never up on the trail and anywhere near there...
Thanks for the additional comments and conversation here, and my apologies for not responding sooner. I'd like to keep this issue alive and am hoping to follow up with the local authorities this fall, to see if they have any additional information they can share, and whether any aspects of the story have come into better focus. I'll definitely write up what I find out, but I'm afraid I really don't know anything more than what I wrote above.
Marlynn, you make a perceptive comment about "still waters": whether we're talking about Barbara or anyone else involved in this mystery, sometimes individuals we think we know well can surprise us. Seems like the news stories about tragedies always find someone to say "but he/she seemed so nice..." etc.
-Sutton
I want to thank you for keeping this issue alive....I need to know what happened to Barbara, good or bad....we have too much history and a long time friendship since high school....I have learned that what seems to be one way on the surface is not really what is lying deep below. I am getting the feeling there is much more to all of this than meets the eye....any new information please let me know and I am hoping this investigation is continuing. A $10,000 reward was offered, but it never went national. I beleive if it would, these 2 men that were supposedly on the trail that day could perhaps be found or will come foward with information that is key to this investigation. TTYS
Did you know Barbara?
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?t=60239
which is where I first heard of the case.
what does this mean? Everyone at the house went in on her going missing? If that was the case why would the guy even mention they saw 2 other hikers...if authorities found them that would ruin his whole story, wouldn't it....
A little background on me: I was the leader of the SAR team that went up the trail that 1st evening to look for Barb. I never in a million years doubted that we would find her that day. I interviewed Jim and my first thought was that for someone to "just disappear" that fast either he was not telling the whole truth or she had gone over the edge of the cliffs ( several hundred foot drop off) So , I called in the Careflight helicopter and they searched the area below the cliffs that afternoon and evening as we searched the trail area and mountain. I asked my supervisor to bring in the search dogs right away as I just felt something was "not right". I can't go into full detail here with all that I went thru for 5 months trying to find Barbara. I literally was on that mountain dozens of times on my own, with SAR and with friends, as well as with a private investigator that was hired by Barbara's husband. Some very very wierd things transpired. I actually was asked to stop my relentless searching for her by the sheriff. I would not quit as I had promised Barb's husband that first night that I would find her. The sheriff fired me from SAR ( I was one of thier most trained and valuable members for 5 years and was nominaed to become president of SAR). It angered him that I was putting more effort into the search for Barbara than his dept was doing and hence I was not folowing the "chain of command". He asked me to stop looking and I wouldn't- couldn't... maybe because as a middle age woman that hikes alone in the woods, I needed to know what happened.
Anyhow,, there's a lot I can't talk about that transpired and even to this day, I flip flop between thinking that Barbara left of her own choosing and that someone abducted or harmed her. I can tell you that I definately do not believe that a wild animal got her. And yes, cadavar dogs were used extensively on several occasions.
I wish you well and know that I too, think of Barbara often and i still keep my eyes and ears open for more clues.
L
Did you think that the two young men hiking with the dog could be more then witnesses (ie were involved)?
Some think she was not on the mountain that day, do you think that is possible?
Could she have fallen off the cliff side and into some brush and just has not been seen yet?
Can you hint at the very weird things that transpired, like did they involve witnesses or physical evidence?
Ann
I don't beleive she feel...with all the searching you did she would have been found...even if she was attacked by animals,there would have been some trace the search dogs would have picked up...again I don't beleive she was every up there since no scent of her was ever found....she was very skilled in climbing and I knew her well...she would have not taken any chances...Jim's story leaves too many questions in my mind...it makes no sense at all...was he involved? He was the last known person with her, what else can you think...why did the sheriff ask you to stop the search? I don't think enough exposure was done and even to this day not enough to get the story out there, pictures of her and more important these 2 guys with a dog that were seen....if those pictures that they had were sent out nationally, someone could have seen them or their vehicle....perhaps they left the area, but to my knowledge that was never done...almost like the whole thing went to slow...Not a day goes by I don't think of her and hope and pray something develops....good or bad to put it to it's proper rest....
Yes, everything moved way too slow during the days following her disappearance, but that is unfortunately not uncommon in these circunmstances. However, so many possible leads were not followed up on. Hence, I became frustrated beyond belief and took it upon myself to do alot of probing and investigating. The sheriif did not support my efforts. He banned me from talking to Barb's husband, Carl. Carl was calling me a lot- as his sole contact because the sherrif would not return his calls and inquiries. I really got stuck between a rock and a hard spot. I have never been able to understand why the sherrif didn't want the information that I was getting from Carl, didn't want the possible evidence that I discovered on the mountain, did not follow up on other possible evidence that others found on the mountain, etc etc. I have no way of knowing if this was related but, I actually was shot at as I was driving home from a movie one night with my mom. The police never even came out to talk to me. Sooooo... after the sheriff "fired" me I stopped all contact with Carl and his family and did no more active investigating on my own.
Mostly, I think that she decided to leave Carl and start a new life- he swears she would never have done it this way- she was a strong woman and would have just told him she wanted out if that is what she wanted. What do you think?
I have a couple of questions for you.. did either of you send a Happy Birthday balloon to Barbara last year( 2007)? Do you know if she ate any special type of candy that she was really known for eating? Potato chips?? Any other "key" things that Barb would have tried to leave on the mountain as evidence for someone trying to find her??
I mainly just wanted you to know that I have not forgotten Barb and I pray that we will someday have an answer to this.
I have wondered what happened to Barb since a day or so after Jul 18, 07 when Carl called me to say that she had gone missing. Barb and I were friends since when she and I worked at Mcguire AFB in NJ back in the mid 70's. I considered her my best and dearest friend. I was planning on visiting her and Carl a couple of weeks in August 07...I couldn't bear to go out there after she dissappeared, I don't think I could have handled it. I feel so bad for Carl, cause he and Barb were like two peas in a pod. It seems incomprehensible that she would have just left...She had sent me e-mails just prior to her disappearance looking forward to my visit, we even talked about hiking and just having a great visit. I can't picture her leaving Carl after all they had been through. When Carl told me of her being missing from a hike my first words were "what the guy just turned around and she was gone-poof" Carl said that is what he was told. To me that Jim guy would be suspect # 1. Personally, I think they weren't at that hiking site, just a gut feeling. Didn't the guy have a rental car--don't most companies have GPS on their vehicles & if so couldn't someone have checked the data base on that vehicle? Sounds like the Sheriff's Police dropped the ball. I miss my best friend, Barb....
What do you mean after all they had been through?
http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/l/lewis_lucille.html
She is around the same age as well.
Any thoughts?
This is Don, Barb's first husband. Just found out about Barb. I agree with your comments. Anyone who knowns anything please notify the sheriff.
You just now found out? I can't beleive no one told you....what about Barbara's brother Kenny in Colorado....he knew from what I understand.....do you have a email to reach you?
Just got a letter yesterday fromDetective Perry Johnson. Haven't heard from Kenny, Or Carl Bolick. My phone and address has been the same for twelve years. A Sad day. Barb was a Special woman. My email is below.
Don
Don
Email me. This way everyone we say is private. Thanks.
Don
If you hear anything that can be shared please let us know here.
Coco