Body of missing Australian found
http://adirondackdailyenterprise.co...ody-of-missing-Australian-found.html?nav=5008
http://adirondackdailyenterprise.co...ody-of-missing-Australian-found.html?nav=5008
….. was found Wednesday near the summit of Scarface Mountain in Ray Brook,
Beyond that, the chief declined to provide any more information, including McKay's cause of death and who found his body, until a news conference that's scheduled to take place late this morning.
Body of missing Australian found
http://adirondackdailyenterprise.co...ody-of-missing-Australian-found.html?nav=5008
Family with Young Kids: Primary trail - Not recommended
Experienced Hiker: Primary trail - 1.5 hours to summit
Out of Shape Hiker: Primary trail - 2.0 hours to summit
"No signs of foul play have been determined in the initial investigation," the state police statement reads.
An autopsy is scheduled today to determine McKay's cause of death.
Beyond that, the chief declined to provide any more information until a news conference that's scheduled to take place later this morning at state police Troop B headquarters in Ray Brook.
I'm interested in the young man who disappeared in the same area last year. Are you able to provide a name so that I can research that a little please, wondering?
I'm curious to see if the Saranac Lake/Lake Placid thing could be just a step in the journey to a final destination. I'm wondering if Paul could be long-gone from the area.
Finding the emotional energy to buy a plane ticket, get to the airport, sit on a gruelling 20-hour flight to NY, get to the bus station, then sit on a long 5-hour bus ride to Saranac Lake (? why Saranac Lake ? no apparent answer to that) to wander off somewhere and end it all because a person is depressed/not coping due to PTSD is a big ask IMO. Plenty of beautiful spots MUCH closer to home, plenty of beautiful hiking much closer to home too.
Asked what gear McKay had with him, Nason and Streiff said he had a ground cover and "winter-type" clothing, but no sleeping bag, tent or any kind of shelter. Streiff said he didn't believe McKay had a gun or any other weapons with him. His possessions have been turned over to state police.
Streiff said it appeared to forest rangers and investigators like McKay "had been there for a while," but they don't know how long. He said the Scarface trail had been checked several times during the search.
"We had been up the trail," he said. "We had done sweeps next to the trail. We had searched the top of Scarface, but our search area was still incomplete, and that's why one ranger started going up and searching some promontories and that's when his body was located near a rock outcropping. He was not visible by the air, nor was he visible by the searchers who had been on Scarface the previous date."
On January 16, 2014, an autopsy was performed on the body of 33-year-old Paul J. McKay, found on January 15, 2014 by New York State Forest Rangers on Scarface Mountain in the town of North Elba.
The autopsy was performed by Dr. C. Francis Varga at Adirondack Medical Center in Saranac Lake, NY, who ruled the cause of death to be arrhythmia due to hypothermia. Essex County Coroner Francis Whitelaw has ruled the manner of death to be suicide.
NO SHELTER
Saranac Lake Police Chief Bruce Nason said in an interview Thursday that McKay did not have any shelter equipment with him on the mountain.
He was lying on the ground covered with a blanket. He was 400 to 500 feet off the trail.
"Essex County Coroner Francis Whitelaw has ruled the manner of death to be suicide," the release states.
"He was laying there, and he had a blanket on himself," said village Police Chief Bruce Nason, describing how McKay's body was found. "He had winter clothes on, a couple layers of jackets and snowpants. He must have just laid down, went to sleep and froze. That's what it looks like."