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2003 Ennis shooting

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Date
  
June 14, 2003 (UTC-7)

Weapons
  
M1911 pistol

Attack type
  
Shootout

Deaths
  
1

2003 Ennis shooting

Location
  
Madison County, Montana, United States

Target
  
Bystanders outside a bar in Ennis, responding law enforcement officers

The 2003 Ennis shooting refers to a June 14, 2003 shooting in which George Harold Davis, opened fire on a group of people outside a bar in downtown Ennis, in Madison County, Montana, then engaged police officers in a high-speed chase and shootout. Davis killed one man and injured six other bystanders at the bar. He was then chased by a sheriff's deputy and highway patrol officer. The chase terminated on the Idaho/Montana state border. Davis was arrested and sentenced to eleven life terms, the largest prison sentence ever to be given in the state of Montana. The chase and shootout were captured on dashboard cameras installed within the two pursuing patrol vehicles.

Contents

Shooting begins

In the early hours of the morning around 2:00 a.m. on Saturday, June 14, 2003, forty-four-year-old, George Harold Davis, drank alone at the Silver Dollar Saloon bar, on Main Street in Ennis, Madison County, Montana. After buying multiple alcoholic beverages and getting heavily intoxicated, Davis got more and more frustrated and was unable to pay for the drinks. He left the bar and went to his car, a gold Ford Taurus, which was parked just outside the bar. He retrieved a .45 semi-automatic pistol from his car, and then opened fire on people outside the bar. He seriously injured six people and fatally shot twenty-seven-year-old Jamie Roberts. After the shooting, Davis fled the scene in his car and drove for nearly two-hundred miles toward Ravalli County, Montana.

Police chase and shootout

At around 8:00 a.m. Ravalli County sheriff deputy, Bernie Allestad, spotted Davis speeding on U.S. Highway 93. Allestad pulled over Davis, who immediately lept out of his vehicle and opened fire on Allestad. Allestad returned fire but was shot in the shoulder and became badly wounded. Davis was also hit during the brief shootout, but he managed to escape and speed away. Davis then entered Missoula County, Montana, where he encountered sheriff deputy David Conway and tried to run him off the road in a head-on collision. Conway dodged the collision and chased after Davis. Montana Highway Patrol officer, Jason Hildenstab, also joined in the pursuit. Hildenstab took the lead and chased after Davis at speeds of one-hundred miles an hour. Davis proceeded to head towards the Idaho border in an attempt to lose the police. As Hildenstab approached Davis, Davis suddenly slammed on his brakes and Hildenstab rear-ended the vehicle. Davis span his vehicle around, exited his car, crouched behind his rear bumper and opened fire on Hildenstab with his .45 semi-automatic pistol. Hildenstab returned fire behind the rear of his patrol vehicle and avoided being hit from the gunfire. Conway then arrived and opened fire with a 12-gauge shotgun. Upon Conway's arrival, Davis fled the scene. Hildenstab's patrol vehicle became disabled and began releasing smoke, as it had been so badly shot up by Davis during the shootout. Hildenstab abandoned his wrecked car and both he and Conway chased after Davis in Conway's patrol vehicle. Conway and Hildenstab pursued Davis westbound along U.S. Highway 12 towards the Idaho border. An Idaho state trooper was then informed by Conway to setup spike strips on the highway to stop Davis from escaping. The trooper carried out the instruction and Davis drove directly over the spike strips. His vehicle came to a stop and Davis opened the door of his car. As he did, Conway accelerated his patrol vehicle towards Davis. Davis then opened fire as the patrol vehicle approached him. Conway charged his vehicle at Davis at sixty-miles an hour and rammed into the side of the car. Davis lost his handgun during the collision and Hildenstab broke his leg. Both Conway and Hildenstab survived, as did Davis. Davis was arrested by the Idaho state troopers, who rushed over to his car after the crash. Davis was too wounded to resist arrest.

Victim

Jamie L. Roberts (September 20, 1975 - June 14, 2003) a twenty-seven-year-old construction worker of Ennis was the only fatality of Davis's shooting spree. Roberts was born in Red Wing, Minnesota and is survived by his wife and daughter.

Other casualties

Six other bystanders were injured outside the bar in Ennis. All of the casualties were out of hospital by July 3, 2003.

  • Ginger Powers - Shot through the stomach.
  • Michael Carroll - Shot in his pancreas.
  • Matt Ortega - Hit by a bullet in his spleen.
  • Isaiah Crowley - Shot four times in the attack.
  • Tret Sutter - Shot through the thigh.
  • Gavin Faulkner - Suffered gunshot wounds to a hand and leg.
  • Perpetrator

    George Harold Davis (born June 20, 1958) was identified as the man responsible for the shooting rampage in Ennis. He was a proponent of white supremacy and anti-Semitism. He was also a trained killer and a paramilitary veteran, who had served as a mercenary in Nicaragua.

    Davis was born in Leavenworth, Kansas, and moved to Washington in the early 1990s. Prior to the shooting, Davis had only recently moved to the Ennis area from Washington. At the time of his shooting spree in Ennis, Davis worked as a ranch hand on a nearby ranch. Davis had also worked as a carpet installer in Washington throughout the 1990s.

    Davis had a prior criminal history on record. Between 1994 and 1997, Davis received four separate restraining orders in Olympia, Washington, including one for harassing a staff member of The Olympian. He reportedly wrote a letter to an Olympian reporter, saying the newspaper was a "criminal organization which was psychologically controlled by the Jews" and that "only white supremacism can save nature's finest." Davis also sent them a newsletter from the neo-Nazi group, National Alliance, which said, "We must halt the flow of Third World immigrants across our borders, and we must take whatever other steps are necessary to reclaim our cities from the hordes of non-Whites who have invaded them during the past 50 years."

    A woman from the Washington area with whom Davis had tried to start a relationship, claimed to have received neo-Nazi literature from him at her work and home address. She also got a restraining order against Davis at the time.

    Aftermath

    Davis was arrested and sentenced to eleven life terms, the largest prison sentence ever given in the state of Montana. He will never be released from prison and is not eligible for parole. The reason for his rampage remains unclear. One possibility is because of a sudden medication withdrawal. Davis said he abruptly stopped taking the antidepressant drug Paxil in the days leading up to the shooting. His defense attorney, Ed Sheehy Jr., argued that heavy drinking and withdrawals from the drug instigated the shootings. But prosecutors argued that Davis was unrepentant for the shootings, and was simply looking for excuses for his actions. Madison County Attorney, Bob Zenker, described Davis as evil, a racist and a cop hater. He argued that Davis could not blame the shootings on medication and alcohol. Davis had no clear answer to why he carried out the rampage and claimed that he didn't even remember the shootings.

    The chase and shootout with Davis was recorded by dashboard cameras installed within Conway and Hildenstab's patrol vehicles. The Idaho state trooper who setup the spike strips at the end of the chase, also captured the aftermath of the chase on a dashboard camera installed in his patrol vehicle. The footage has been widely reported in the media and has been shown on many television documentaries, including: Most Shocking, World's Wildest Police Videos, 16×9 and Under Fire.

    References

    2003 Ennis shooting Wikipedia