Taken from the June 14, 2011 NPS Morning Report
Shenandoah NP
Rangers Investigate One Suicide, Intervene In Two Others
Rangers successfully intervened in two suicide attempts this spring and
investigated a third in which a woman succeeded in her efforts by driving
her car off Skyline Drive and crashing several hundred feet below:
On April 29th, a police dispatcher in Harrisonburg received a call from
a man who said that he was camping on Turk Mountain and was going to
shoot himself. Park dispatch was contacted and rangers helped the
Harrisonburg dispatcher talk the man into leaving his weapon at his
campsite and hiking to Skyline Drive to meet them. They took the man
into protective custody at the trailhead and transported him to the
Augusta Medical Center. They then recovered his weapon and all the items
from his campsite. The man had been hiking the Appalachian Trail in the
park for a week when he made the call.
On May 17th, park dispatch was contacted by the sheriff’s office in
Jefferson County, West Virginia, and advised that a man had called his
wife and told her that he’d taken enough medication to be dead within 15
minutes. Rangers determined that the 53-year-old man had registered at
Skyland Lodge. When they reached his room, several hours after he’d
called his wife, they found him unconscious in his room and suffering
from severe respiratory distress. Basic and advanced life support
measures employed by rangers and Page County rescue personnel greatly
aided in keeping him alive.
On June 2nd, a park maintenance crew working at Horsehead Overlook on
Skyline Drive noticed that vegetation was laid down at the edge of the
overlook and discovered a vehicle 300 to 400 feet below. Rangers found
that the sole occupant had not survived the crash and that she had been
listed as missing and suicidal by police in Farmville the day before. A
suicide note was found inside along with notes indicating that she’d
scouted other Shenandoah overlooks that night.