
Remember when a woman’s body was found by a family looking for a Christmas tree? Whatever happened to that death investigation?
A woman’s body was found in the Gold Creek area by people looking for a Christmas tree on Thursday evening.
Missoula County Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Jeanette Smith says law enforcement responded to a report of a deceased person whose body was found in the area of Montana Highway 200 and Gold Creek.
The woman is believed to be in her late 30s to early 40s with a news release noting that the body — which could not be identified — was taken to the Missoula Medical Examiner’s Office.
An investigation into the body’s discovery is continuing.
Well, there was no evidence, we were told, of “foul play”, so case closed. Unfortunately not everyone believes local law enforcemen.

This dead woman was finally identified as Tyler Christine-Rosetta Arnold and I guess we’re expected to believe she died in the middle of the woods from natural causes.
Right?
The dead body found by hikers on the Kim Williams trail last November has NEVER been publicly identified by officials, but that didn’t stop commenters on Facebook. After 8 months of NOTHING from official sources, today I’m reporting the likelihood the dead man was Mike Condo, from Butte.


Back in April a media company sued Missoula County to get what they needed for their death stories. You see, True Crime is a popular and lucrative content market, which makes a mentally ill Native woman who killed her own children GREAT content for a media company like EWU Media LLC to exploit.
So, why is Missoula County being so stingy with their valuable death content? Does it really make sense to use “Confidential Criminal Justice Information” to hide behind?
A national media company known for producing true crime videos sued Missoula County for details on two graphic cases involving children, which the county has refused to share, citing privacy concerns.
EWU Media LLC, based in Las Vegas, Nevada, is seeking body camera footage and testimony related to a case of double homicide of children in 2021 and an infant who was left partially buried near Lolo Hot Springs in 2018.
While both cases have been closed, and therefore public under Montana law, Missoula County contends it must notify the families involved and have a judge release the data before sharing the graphic footage with the company.
“We believe we are subject to the fact that (the records) are confidential criminal justice files and we need that court order in order to release them,” Brian West, chief civil deputy county attorney, said in court.
Well, Mr. Brian West, you already have the Bureau of Land Management using details of this story to make their agency look good, and you also have this article from Oxygen True Crime. Considering how much of this story has already been publicly told, I find it very odd that Missoula County is fighting to keep additional details hidden from the public.
Why?
For the legal argument being made to publicly disclose what Missoula County has been sitting on, here’s civil attorney, Mike Meloy’s, take:
Montana first amendment attorney Mike Meloy is representing the group in the case. He told Larson that under the Montana Constitution’s right to know clause, all the records of the case should be released.
“Our position is that all of these records in the closed cases we requested are presumptively open,” Meloy said in court.
West said since the cases involve children, Missoula County argues there is a heightened level of privacy and seeks the family’s acknowledgement before releasing the files.
This morning, after TWO YEARS of zero information about Ross Robertson’s “police custody” death, details of his death will finally be examined by a Missoula County prosecutor in a purely performative (in my opinion) legal process known as the Coroner’s Inquest.

Last November I was interviewed by a Boston tv news station about dead people, specifically the ones murdered by Kevin Lino. This morning, when I went looking for that news segment, I found a New York Post article with my name in it instead. Interesting.
“It is a serial murder, but it’s not the kind of predatory killer that we generally think of when we talk about serial murder,” Northeastern University criminologist James Alan Fox told Boston 25.
Nevertheless, experts think the man whose face is covered in terrifying tattoos exhibits that “dark triad” of personality types — psychopathy, narcissism and manipulative Machiavellianism — often found in serial killers.
“I believe he is a very dangerous, dangerous individual. So, I think he is a serial killer for sure,” said Montana journalist Travis Mateer, who spent time with Lino as a homeless counselor in Missoula.
Mateer believes Lino is even responsible for the vanishing of another homeless man, Monte Swanson, who knew Lino in Missoula.
And prosecutors are also open to the idea that Lino might have more deaths on his hands.
“We continue to investigate that,” said Ryan. “We never give up on those cases. We don’t forget about them, and we stay open to other information.”
If local investigators in Missoula share this sentiment, I’ve compiled a list of my top ten suspicious deaths over the past 4 years. Here it is:

To wrap this post up, I’d like to highlight a new media effort that has popped up to tell death stories in Missoula, spearheaded by Jule Banville.
Jule Banville has spent more than a decade asking her journalism students at the University of Montana to do something a lot of reporters stopped doing years ago: pick up the phone and report an obituary. Not the kind families write themselves — which often consist of the bare-bones lists of survivors and accomplishments — but deeply reported features in the tradition of Jim Sheeler, the late Rocky Mountain News writer whose short profiles cut straight to what made a person human.
That classroom assignment has now grown into something much bigger. The Obit Project is a 12-episode podcast that tells stories about the lives of real Montanans after they die. It’s co-hosted by Banville with Jad Abumrad, who founded the pioneering public radio podcast Radiolab. I love Abumrad (he created one of my favorite podcast portraits, Dolly Parton’s America), but I’m saving my breathlessness for Banville here, because the Obit Project idea comes from her long-running feature writing course at UM’s journalism school and her own expert background in audio storytelling.
Great idea, Jule Banville! And I’m sure you’ll get nothing but cooperation from our local authorities in telling these important death stories. I’m glad someone can make money and further their journalistic career telling these kind of narratives.
Thanks for reading!












































