Yellowstone crews scale back search for Utah conservationist

The Associated Press

OGDEN, Utah — The National Park Service has scaled back the search for Kim Crumbo, a conservationist from Utah who disappeared along with his brother, a Chimacum resident, during a Yellowstone backcountry trip in September.

The national park that covers parts of Wyoming, Idaho and Montana has gotten a blanket of snow and temperatures have dipped into the 20s, making search operations challenging, a spokesman told the Standard-Examiner in Ogden, Crumbo’s hometown.

His brother, 67-year-old Mark O’Neill of Chimacum, was found dead of hypothermia last month.

The men had been on a four-night backcountry trip to Shoshone Lake. A relative reported them overdue Sept. 19.

A vacant campsite was found on the lake’s south side. What happened remains under investigation, they said.

The men were experienced boaters and former National Park Service employees, and Crumbo is a former Navy SEAL who served in Vietnam. Crumbo also co-founded the conservation group Grand Canyon Wildlands Council, which later merged with another group to form Wild Arizona.

The park will continue limited search efforts for Crumbo as long as conditions allow, park service officials said in a statement.

O’Neill, who started work at Olympic National Park in 1996 and retired in 2016, was a diver and boatsman who led many rescue and recovery missions,

O’Neill worked at Nez Perce National Historical Park and Grand Canyon National Park before coming to Olympic.

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Jefferson County Reporter Diane Urbani de la Paz contributed to this story.

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