Montana

Former University of Montana quarterback, Jordan Johnson, center, reacts to being acquitted of rape charges during his trial Friday March 1, 2013 in Missoula, Mont. With Johnson are his attorneys, David Paoli and Kirsten Pabst. The accusations against Johnson, 20, have drawn much attention in Montana, where UM football is the top sports attraction. Jurors deliberated for less than two hours. (AP Photo/Matt Gouras)

Ex-Montana quarterback acquitted of rape

 

MISSOULA, Mont. — A former University of Montana quarterback was acquitted Friday in a rape trial that has played out amid NCAA and federal investigations into how the city and school respond to rape allegations on campus.

The accusations against Jordan Johnson, 20, have drawn much attention in Montana, where UM football is the top sports attraction. Jurors deliberated for less than two hours.

Johnson led the University of Montana to a successful 2011 season as starting quarterback before being accused of assaulting a woman as they watched a movie together at her home last February.

His case has played out against a backdrop of NCAA and federal investigations of the university’s athletic department and the manner in which rape allegations are handled on campus, investigated by police and prosecuted by the Missoula County attorney’s office.

Report: Unclear what prompted Yellowstone mauling

HELENA, Mont. -- An investigation into the second of two fatal grizzly bear attacks last summer at Yellowstone National Park was unable to conclude if the same bear was responsible for both deaths, a report released Monday said.

Lost snowmobilers took refuge in Monte Cristo cabin

LIBERTY — Three snowmobilers from Montana who became stranded in deep snow Thursday night survived by taking refuge in a cabin in the Monte Cristo area, according to the Weber County Sheriff’s Office.

Montana linebacker accused of DUI after crashing truck

MISSOULA, Mont. -- Authorities say that a university of Montana linebacker has been charged with drunk driving after his pickup truck rolled over and stopped inches from a Missoula home.

This undated image shows a wolf in Montana. Officials in Idaho are considering deploying federal sharpshooters in helicopters across the north-central part of the state in the coming weeks to kill up to 75 wolves they say are threatening elk near the Montana border. (Photo courtesy of Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks)

Killing of wolves from air in Idaho draws fire

SEATTLE -- For years, the federal agencies that helped the U.S. wolf population recover under the Endangered Species Act have also quietly killed hundreds of wolves that threaten livestock or prized game.

They've even taken to the skies -- and are considering doing so again.

Officials in Idaho said Wednesday they would consider deploying federal sharpshooters in helicopters across north-central Idaho in the coming weeks to kill up to 75 wolves threatening elk near the Montana border.

(DAVID COLE/Coeur d’Alene Press) An Idaho visitor center offers an introduction to one of the rugged symbols of Boundary County, the grizzly. On Friday, a wounded grizzly at the Idaho-Montana border killed a Nevada hunter.

Wounded grizzly kills hunter in Idaho

A 39-year-old hunter killed by a wounded grizzly bear yelled out to draw the 400-pound male bear toward him in an effort to keep it from attacking his young hunting partner, the man’s family said.

Montana cuts back search for militia member

Montana authorities on Tuesday scaled down a search for a militia member accused of firing on two sheriff’s deputies, saying the practiced survivalist and ex-convict could easily have traveled dozens of miles through the state’s jagged western mountains.

Ron Gillett of Stanley, Idaho, for years made his living hosting elk hunters and guiding float trips down the Salmon River near Stanley, Idaho. He now heads the Idaho Anti-Wolf Coalition. (Kim Murphy/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

Idaho and Montana prepare for wolf hunts

STANLEY, Idaho -- It used to be you could look across the ridge from Ron Gillett's house and a couple of dozen elk would be foraging for grass. Then you'd hear a scary kind of howling, and the elk would take off, a pack of wolves close on their heels.

It got so that Gillett couldn't stand to see the spindly elk calves fall into the wolves' hungry embrace -- not when hunting elk has been his livelihood for much of his life. He'd get screaming mad at wolf advocates who came to watch in wonder as the packs executed their skillful and deadly dances around their prey.

"When I see a cow elk with her guts hanging out, and a little calf that's been hamstrung -- I know I'm on the right side. No question about it," Gillett said. "These Canadian wolves are the most cruel, vicious predators in North America."

Now the days of talking compromise are over, he said. "We're killing 'em."

After Congress quietly passed a budget rider requiring wolves to be removed from the endangered species list in Idaho and Montana, state officials are preparing to draw up plans for new wolf hunts.

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