A gunman opened fire at a neighborhood bar in the small town of Anaconda, Montana, on Friday morning, killing four people before disappearing into the rural foothills of southwestern Montana, prompting a search that extended late into the night.
Authorities identified the suspect as Michael P. Brown, 45, and said late Friday that he remained on the loose after driving away from the scene in a white truck. Police were focusing their search on mountains just outside of town.
Local, state and federal agents fanned out across the region on foot, in vehicles and by helicopter in a growing chase through brushy, difficult-to-search terrain. Residents and business owners were told to keep their doors closed and look out for the suspect, who was described as armed and dangerous.
(Janie Osborne | The New York Times) People outside the Owl Bar in Anaconda, Mont., after a shooting on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025.
“We’re all in the brush,” said Dan Sletton, who lives near Stumptown Road west of the town, where the suspect was last seen in a white pickup. “The guy could be 20 feet from us and we wouldn’t know.”
“This is a small, tight-knit community that’s been harmed by the heinous actions of one individual today, who does not represent what this community — or Montanans — stand for,” said Lee Johnson, who leads the state’s Division of Criminal Investigation.
Johnson said that authorities had found the truck Brown was driving, but that he was not with it. A white pickup truck with a crumpled hood and grille was towed out of the area of Stumptown Road on Friday evening.
Johnson said all four victims had been identified but he did not publicly name them. He did not respond to reporters’ questions.
Witnesses said they heard gunshots in the Owl Bar around 10:30 a.m. local time. Brown was well known around town, and social media posts show he had been to the establishment.
(Janie Osborne | The New York Times) Police officers and other personnel outside the Owl Bar in Anaconda, Mont., after a shooting on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025.
Brown joined the Army in January 2001 and had deployed to Iraq for a little over a year between 2004 and 2005 before leaving the service in May 2005 as a sergeant, an Army spokesperson said. He was in the Montana National Guard for about two years until March 2008.
Two relatives of Brown said he had returned from the Army with physical ailments and severe post-traumatic stress disorder that gave him night terrors. They said he was later diagnosed with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.
One of the relatives, a sister who spoke on the condition that her name not be used, said that Brown would claim that famous movies had been based on his actions overseas. He sometimes told people that he was Jason Bourne, or a five-star general on a secret mission.
She and other family members had tried to get help for Brown from the Department of Veterans Affairs, she said, but without Brown’s cooperation, little could be done.
Tobe McHugh, 48, and Tyler Edwards, 25, two mechanics in the area, said Brown had, in the past, told them wild stories, including about being a professional golfer or completing secret missions.
“He’s a calm guy, but he’s out there,” McHugh said as he stood outside another bar down the street from the Owl. “He was always telling stories.”
Brown grew up mostly in Anaconda, a former copper smelting town near Butte in Deer Lodge County, with a population of about 10,000. Records show that he lived just two houses down from the Owl Bar, a local dive with a pool table, a clutter of decorations and a sign out front that boasts the “best tap beer in town.”
On Friday evening, the bar was surrounded by police tape and law enforcement vehicles, with TV cameras lined across the street awaiting news on the search. More police officers and federal agents continued to stream in, including from Missoula, about a 1 1/2-hour drive northwest.
“I’m constantly hearing sirens go off every 10 or 15 minutes,” said Brandon Baragar, 32, who lives in the search area. “They’re looking, just trying to find a needle in a haystack.”
Friday’s attack marked the deadliest shooting in Montana since June 2015, when a man in the same county shot his wife and three young children before killing himself, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive, a research group.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Donate to the newsroom now. The Salt Lake Tribune, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) public charity and contributions are tax deductible