The sad death of Bruce Colburn in Glacier National park

Kintla Lake glacier national park

Bruce Colburn, disappeared October 9, 2008, Body Found October 29, 2008, Kintla Lake, Glacier National park, Montana.

Revised April 2024

Bruce Colburn, 53, headed to Glacier National Park in the fall of 2008 from Reading, Pennsylvania for a wilderness adventure. He was President and CEO of Kadent Corp, a bill collection service company for hospitals and health clinics. He was last seen on October 9, 2008, and sadly his remains were located at the end of October 2008. What happened to Bruce?

What is and where is Glacier National Park?

Glacier National Park is an American national park located in northwestern Montana, on the Canada–United States border, adjacent to the Canadian provinces of Alberta and British Columbia.

The park encompasses over 1 million acres (4,000 km2) and includes parts of two mountain ranges (sub-ranges of the Rocky Mountains), over 130 named lakes, more than 1,000 different species of plants, and hundreds of species of animals. The park has almost all its original native plant and animal species such as grizzly bears, moose, and mountain goats, as well as rare or endangered species like wolverines and Canadian lynxes.

Bruce Colburn’s trip to Glacier National Park

Bruce told his family he would be gone for anywhere from a week to a month. It was late in the hiking season, so the park was quiet at that time of the year. He flew into Glacier Park International Airport on October 7, spent the night in a hotel, and got a ride to the park from a hotel employee to Glacier’s North Fork area. Colburn told the employee that he would be in contact in around 2 weeks when he returned from the hike.

On October 8, 2008, Bruce told a park ranger he planned to hike into the wilderness, and the ranger reported that Bruce had brand new equipment, including a backpack and tent.

Glacier national park

The ranger told Colburn that he needed a permit to camp overnight in the backcountry,  but he seemingly wanted to avoid paperwork and he spent the night where he did not need a permit at the Kintla Lake Campground.

The next morning, on October 9, Bruce headed out along Kintla Lake and that was the last time he was seen alive.

The search for Bruce Colburn

On October 23, park officials were contacted by the hotel employee that had given Colburn a ride to the park on October 8 that they were concerned about his welfare. An initial aerial and ground search was conducted on Sunday, October 26, by park personnel who hiked and searched trail corridors around Kintla Lake, including the Bowman Lake drainage, and the trail system leading to Goat Haunt. However, no clues or evidence were found. 

More than 30 people were involved in the search including NPS personnel, U.S. Border Patrol agents, Flathead County Sheriff’s Office search and rescue personnel, and unusually the FBI.

Kintla Lake glacier national park

A subsequent search over the following days by Park Rangers searching the ground near the head of Kintla Lake, in the park’s remote northwest corner, found a pack matching the description of Colburn’s pack (greyish in color) in thick forest on October 29.

An aerial search using a Minuteman Helicopter was started, and Colburn’s body was found within minutes, at around 5 pm, on a slope above the trail from where this pack was found about a quarter-mile south of the head of the lake in a brush-choked avalanche chute. It appeared that he had left the Kintla Lake trail and scrambled upslope to a point approximately one-quarter to one-third of a mile above the lake.

What caused the death of Bruce Colburn?

According to the Flathead County Coroner’s Office, the death was considered a suicide caused by a self-inflicted single gunshot wound to the chest. It became apparent that Bruce had been let go from Kadent Corp. and was unemployed when he arrived in the Glacier Park area. Family members had informed park authorities that Colburn was carrying a .40-caliber Beretta handgun, which was found at the scene.

A disturbing death in a beautiful spot in the Glacier National Park. Was it a simple case of depression and suicide caused by Bruce's firing from his CEO role or something more sinister? Another sad story in a U.S. national park.

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