A body was found in the state of New
Mexico, US not far from where a Colorado pastor parked his vehicle before heading
out to search for a supposed hidden cache of gold and jewels that has inspired
thousands to hunt in vain across remote corners of the Western U.S.,
authorities said Monday.
Associated
Press report continues:
Medical
investigators have yet to identify the body, but all the evidence so far
indicates it is that of missing pastor Paris Wallace of Grand Junction, State
Police Lt. Elizabeth Armijo said.
The
case has reignited calls by some to end a treasure hunt that has had deadly
outcomes and forces public resources to be spent on search and rescue efforts.
Last
year, a Colorado man died in the New Mexico backcountry while searching for the
bounty that an antiquities dealer said he stashed somewhere in the Rocky
Mountains. It's led treasure hunters to comb secluded areas of New Mexico,
Yellowstone National Park and elsewhere.
In
the latest case, crews began looking for Wallace last week after his family
reported him missing.
Family
members told authorities that Wallace had come to New Mexico to search for the
treasure of Forrest Fenn, who announced several years ago that he hid a small
bronze chest containing nearly US$2 million in gold, jewelry and artifacts in the
Rockies.
Fenn
has dropped clues to the chest's whereabouts in a cryptic poem in his memoir,
"The Thrill of the Chase."
Treasure
hunters have shared their experiences on blogs and have brainstormed about the
clues.
Many
renewed their support for Fenn on social media Monday despite critics raising
questions about the dangers of venturing into the rugged areas where some of
the clues have led.
Wallace's
vehicle was found Thursday near the Rio Grande after authorities traced the
location where he last used his cellphone.
Armijo
told The Daily Sentinel newspaper in Grand Junction (http://bit.ly/2sFbxeZ ) on
Friday that investigators also found a rope tied across one of the river's
tributaries that they believe Wallace had purchased and his backpack in the
waters of the Rio Grande a few miles downstream.
Members
of Wallace's church shared their condolences online and asked for prayers for
his family.
Linda
Bilyeu, whose ex-husband Randy Bilyeu went missing while searching for the
treasure along the Rio Grande in January 2016, was among those calling for an
end to the treasure hunt after the latest case.
"Another
family is left to grieve and carry on without their loved ones," Bilyeu
told The Associated Press in an email. "Only one man has the power to stop
the madness. Yet, he continues to pretend he's doing a good deed by getting
people off the couch and into nature."
Fenn
did not immediately return messages seeking comment.
As for ending the hunt, he has previously refused, saying that would be unfair to those who have spent their time and money looking for the 40-pound chest.
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