Yellowstone releases body-worn camera footage of July 4 shootout

The suspect threatened to kill an employee and carry out mass shootings at Canyon Village in Yellowstone National Park.

Yellowstone National Park released body-worn camera footage from a July 4 shootout with a suspect who threatened to kill an employee and carry out mass shootings at the Employee Dining Room at Canyon Village.

The suspect was killed in the shootout, and an officer sustained a gunshot wound to a lower extremity and transported to a medical facility for treatment, the National Park Service reported Thursday.

The video, which can be viewed from the above link, describes what happened during the incident at the iconic park.

“Just after midnight on July 4, the Yellowstone Interagency Communications Center received a report that a concession employee had been unwillingly held by an individual for several hours on the late evening of July 3,” the video report states. “The individual, later identified by NPS law enforcement officers as Samson Lucas Bariah Fussner, also a concession employee, allegedly came to the employee’s residence in Canyon Village armed with a knife and handgun.

Related: Suspect dies, ranger injured in Yellowstone National Park shootout

“The report also indicated that Fussner threatened to kill the employee and target the Employee Dining Room in Canyon Village the following day. The Employee Dining Room…is the primary food and beverage location for Canyon-based employees of Xanterra Parks and Resorts.”

The employee, who managed to escape, called for help and told officers that Fussner planned to carry out mass shootings at the Employee Dining Room and July 4 events outside the park.

Twenty National Park Service law enforcement officers, including the Yellowstone/Grand Teton Special Response Team, responded to the 911 call and began searching for the suspect in and around Canyon Lodge.

They found the suspect’s unoccupied and unlocked vehicle in the lodge’s main parking lot, and inside discovered an unsecured handgun.

At 8:05 a.m., Fussner emerged from the woods with a semi-automatic rifle and encountered an NPS law enforcement officer near the Canyon Lodge,” the video report states. “Fussner fired at Officer #3.”

Soon after, another officer shot Fussner, ending the shootout.

“This incident is still under investigation,” the NPS stated. “The investigation, which includes the actions taken by NPS law enforcement officers, is being led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.”

Suspect dies, ranger injured in Yellowstone National Park shootout

The deceased individual was reported to have been acting in a threatening manner while waving a firearm.

Yellowstone National Park rangers were involved in a shootout overnight Wednesday that left one man dead and at least one ranger injured.

The unidentified man had been reported as acting in a threatening manner while carrying a firearm at Canyon Village near the center of the park.

When law-enforcement rangers arrived, there was an exchange of gunfire, the park stated in a news release.

The “subject” was declared dead early Thursday and at least one ranger was reported to be in stable condition at a regional hospital.

The Canyon Village area remains closed to the public while the FBI and National Park Service agents conduct an investigation. As of mid-morning Thursday, there were no active threats in the park.

The park stated that “no additional information is available at this time.”

–Image courtesy of ©Pete Thomas

This Finland one-handed shootout attempt is breaking brains (and goaltenders)

Just because it wasn’t goal doesn’t mean we’re not still in awe

Diehard NHL fans of the mid-aughts might remember the name Teemu Hartikainen.

The 32-year-old forward was the 163rd overall pick of the 2008 NHL draft by the Edmonton Oilers and spent the next few years going back-and-forth between Edmonton and their Oklahoma City affiliate.

In all, Hartikainen played 52 games in the NHL, scoring six goals with seven assists before returning overseas to play in the KHL—though he has won two gold medals at the Olympics and World Championships with Finland.

That lack of production on the NHL stage will no longer be Hartikainen legacy. Not after what he nearly pulled off this weekend with Finland’s national team in a Euro Hockey Tour matchup against Sweden.

After the contest went to a shootout, Hartikainen took the ice and put a dazzling spin on the lacrosse move that features an absurd amount of wrist strength and coordination.

Sweden’s goalie had no chance—and yet Hartikainen couldn’t put the puck past him.

Goodness. That’s the hockey version of “down low, too slow”. The rare shootout attempt that impresses regardless of whether or not he scored.

The way Hartikainen pulls the puck back with one hand while scooping it up off the ice is just beyond belief. The physics of it all barely make sense.

And while Finland lost the shootout (and the game, 4-3), all anyone cares about is what Hartikainen dared to attempt.