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Last updated on May 30, 2012 at 13:11 EDT

Remains Identified As Suspected Killer

June 12, 2007
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By JENNIFER DOBNER

SALT LAKE CITY – Human remains found in southeastern Utah are those of a man accused of killing a Colorado police officer, a slaying that sparked an intense manhunt for three people in 1998, authorities said Tuesday.

The Utah state medical examiner matched a partial jawbone with Jason McVean’s dental records, said Trent Pederson, an FBI spokesman in Salt Lake City.

The partial skeleton discovered last week by a cowboy near the Utah-Colorado line. The medical examiner was not releasing the cause of death, Pederson said.

The confirmation ends a nine-year-old mystery about the whereabouts of McVean, of Durango, Colo. He was 26 when he disappeared, accused along with two other men of killing Cortez police Officer Dale Claxton.

His partners, Alan “Monte” Pilon and Robert Matthew Mason, were found dead in the same Four Corners region of Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.

The discovery of McVean’s remains doesn’t answer any questions for Claxton’s boss, Cortez Police Chief Roy Lane.

“There’s only three people who know what happened and they’re all dead,” he said.

Authorities said the camouflage-clad trio stole a water truck in Ignacio, Colo., on May 28, 1998, and were driving through Cortez when Claxton crossed their path, pulling his patrol car behind them and calling for backup.

Before help arrived, however, the truck stopped and the killers jumped out and opened fire, according to authorities. Claxton, 45, never even unbuckled his seat belt as he was shot 29 times.

Police officers from more than 50 departments swept the region for the three men in a manhunt that summer.

McVean’s body was found in Cross Canyon, about 25 miles east of Blanding, Utah, near Hovenweep National Monument. Pilon’s body was found by deer hunters in the same area in October 1999.

Mason, his body strapped with pipe bombs, was found dead about 25 miles southwest of the canyon in a dirt bunker near the banks of the San Juan River, a few days after Claxton’s killing. He allegedly shot and twice wounded a San Juan County sheriff’s deputy who was investigating a report of a sniper.

Found with McVean’s remains on June 5: a bulletproof vest, camouflage backpack, pipe bombs, an AK-47, hundreds of rounds of ammunition and a business card belonging to Pilon.

FBI agents are sifting through the cache to determine if it holds any clues to the men’s plans or why they stole the water truck. At the time, some people believed they were anti-government survivalists or eco-terrorists.

“We’ve all read all the different possibilities, but I think a lot of it is just speculation,” Pederson said. “I’m not sure we’ll ever know – not that it would ever justify an officer’s death.”

McVean’s remains will be returned to relatives when investigators close the case, Pederson said.