It seems like he was ruled out for some reason.
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It is very possible the gun shot wounds and reports he was a "man" rather than a teen were what caused the rule out. And possibly the location. They were driving down 95, this is more in he middle of the panhandle, rather than the western state border along the Snake.
Two youths getting into a car crash into a notorious river during spring run-off would be reason enough to accept they died in a car crash. Many bodies are never recovered from car crashes, rafting accidents, or falls into these water ways.
Here’s an article I found that says the two youths “had been bound for Boise.” Now I want to know if the strong current was known to be going north, which would have been another clue to match the floating body in the Snake River found two days after this article was written.
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Also, it looks like the articles that mentioned the Snake River near Riggins and Hwy 95 were wrong. It was the Salmon River. Which means Dewayne’s body had to be carried all the way up the Salmon River to where it meets the Snake, then up the Snake all the way up to near the Grande Rondo river. Were there some mountains in between? That current was really strong, apparently.
See below.
Also notable about this story is it’s dated June 24, 1982 - a whole ten days after the two youths disappearances - and it was still too dangerous to search the Salmon River. I wonder if was just as just as dangerous far upstream in the Snake River where Dewayne’s body was found.
1982 was a massive El Niño snow year in Idaho. Places in Central Idaho got over 3 feet of snow in April. Galena Summit had 15 foot high snow cliffs along the road way. Massive amounts of snow. Massive spring run off going into the Salmon, Payette, Big Wood all running into the Snake.
The Salmon is a massive waterway with some of the best White Water rafting in the Pacific Northwest. Highway 95 is one of the deadliest roads in Idaho and some surrounding states. It was definitely more primitive in 1982. With steep embankments and minimal guard rails, a crash is rarely survivable. June would have heavy, heavy mountain run-off, raising the river levels due to the snow melts. There are many accidents and misadventures in those rivers and generally if/when a vehicle is found in the waterway, bodies are no longer in the vehicle as windows aren't intact due to debris and current strength. It is generally accepted as unsurvivable.
The Lower Salmon does merge with the massive Snake River. Interestingly this flows North and Northwest up to Lewiston. So the body could end up near Heller Creek where it was found and pulled to shore near WA/ID border.
Is it too late to find out if anyone in either boys families or circle of friends knew if either one had access to that particular model of .38 Smith & Wesson handgun? There’s always hope. Will LE even bother to ask that question in 2024?
The gunshots are just one evidentiary trail that could have been followed in the crash case to unravel what happened - had the Nez Perce County investigators not been so quick to rule out Dewayne as the unidentified male in 1982. Were gunshot wounds part of the reason Dewayne was ruled out?
The accident could have been caused by someone taking "pot shots" at the car. Rural kids with a gun, screwing around. If they ever found the vehicle, there might be bullets in the body of the car. The windows would be long gone. Given how high, swift, and full of debris the rivers were that year, that little Datsun could have been crushed.