Current:Home > My911 call shows man suspected in plan to attack Colorado amusement park was found dead near a ride -Core Financial Strategies
911 call shows man suspected in plan to attack Colorado amusement park was found dead near a ride
View
Date:2025-04-17 17:56:16
DENVER (AP) — The body of a heavily armed man who authorities suspected was planning a “heinous” attack at a mountaintop amusement park in Colorado was discovered with a self-inflicted gunshot wound in the bathroom at a building that houses a ride that drops 110-feet deep into caverns, according to a 911 call released Wednesday.
A Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park maintenance worker can be heard in the Saturday morning call calmly telling a dispatcher that the body was surrounded by weapons and alcohol in the women’s bathroom at a ride called the Crystal Tower.
A message saying, “I am not a killer, I just wanted to get into the caves,” was written on the wall of the bathroom where Diego Barajas Medina’s body was found, Garfield County Sheriff Lou Vallario said earlier this week.
No evidence has been released by authorities detailing exactly what the 20-year-old man had planned when he entered the park via a private service road in the hours before it opened over the weekend. Medina had no known prior criminal history, according to authorities.
But Vallario said that weapons and ordnance found on Medina and in his car — including an AR-style rifle, a handgun and an assortment of real and fake explosive devices — made it “very highly likely” that he intended to use them against members of the community. Medina also was wearing body armor and tactical clothing, similar to what a police SWAT team member might wear, authorities said.
“He was well intended to do something very heinous,” the sheriff said.
Medina was never employed at Glenwood Caverns, according to park representatives. Authorities were trying to determine if he had any other connection to the amusement park, sheriff’s office spokesperson Walt Stowe said.
Police in nearby Carbondale said they had made no service calls to an apartment where public records show Medina lived. He had taken classes at Colorado Mountain College as a high school student and expressed a plan to enroll at the college but never did, according to the college.
Efforts to reach Medina’s family for comment have been unsuccessful.
The amusement park is surrounded by state-owned public land on a mountain above the Colorado River in western Colorado. It features cave tours, a roller coaster and a pendulum swing ride perched on the edge of a cliff that sends riders over the river canyon. Its website advertises the Crystal Tower as an “underground drop ride” where visitors can drop deep into Iron Mountain to view a “crystal grotto.”
Park representatives said in a Monday statement that Glenwood Caverns has an extensive network of fencing, gates, security cameras and alarms to protect rides, ride-restricted areas and sensitive buildings. The park said “the incident on October 28 did not take place in any of these areas and was not related to any rides or attractions.”
The park repeated that statement Wednesday evening in response to questions about the 911 call. A recording of the call was released to The Associated Press under a public records request.
___
Brown reported from Billings, Montana.
veryGood! (512)
Related
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Rachel Morin Confirmed Dead as Authorities Reveal They Have No Solid Suspect
- Beauty on a Budget: The Best Rated Drugstore Concealers You Can Find on Amazon for $10 or Less
- All of You Will Love These Photos of John Legend and Chrissy Teigen's First Vacation as a Family of 6
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- 'Killers of a Certain Age' and more great books starring women over 40
- Sen. Dianne Feinstein, 90, falls at home and goes to hospital, but scans are clear, her office says
- Fire at a Texas apartment complex causes hundreds of evacuations but no major injuries are reported
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- NYC doctor sexually assaulted unconscious patients and filmed himself doing it, prosecutors say
Ranking
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- GOP megadonor pours millions into effort to hinder Ohio abortion amendment
- Postal Service reduces air cargo by 90% over 2 years as part of cost-cutting effort
- Tesla CFO Zach Kirkhorn stepping down after 13 years with Elon Musk's company
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Oregon Capitol construction quietly edges $90 million over budget
- Sacramento mayor trades barbs with DA over 'unprecedented' homeless crisis
- Even Zoom wants its workers back in the office: 'A hybrid approach'
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Stock market today: Asia shares mostly decline after Wall Street slide on bank worries
Lapchick lauds NBA’s hiring practices, initiatives in annual TIDES diversity report
Why Ohio’s Issue 1 proposal failed, and how the AP called the race
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
NYPD Blue Child Star Austin Majors' Cause of Death Revealed
Inside Pennsylvania’s Monitoring of the Shell Petrochemical Complex
Taylor Swift and SZA lead 2023 MTV Video Music Award nominations