by Carnivore » Tue Nov 19, 2019 12:28 am
This might be ironic, but it's possible that Bill spent his last days searching for something, somewhat resembling our search for him. Since his call to Mary on the morning of June 24, there were multiple conflicting reports of the location and orientation of his vehicle at Juniper Flats Trailhead. I find it hard to believe that so many people were mistaken on the vehicle's location, and the other possibility that he was randomly targeted by a murderer who decided to move his car multiple times (in a U-Haul?) is less likely than the chance of me hitting the Powerball and the Mega Millions jackpots on the same week.
The most likely explanation is that he explored multiple areas of the park on the day of his call to Mary. He left Juniper Flats at least once to revisit those places as soon as he realized that he lost something of great value to him (business contacts? confidential messages? personal data?) and was also prevented from communicating with the people he knew. Losing his phone on the trail would fit that situation almost perfectly, so here's a possible timeline:
Thursday, June 24 -
8 AM - Bill Ewasko calls Mary and says that he's heading westbound near Monterey Ave and intends to be out of the park by 5 PM and plans to take dinner in Pioneertown. He turns his phone off to conserve power not because he intends on taking a long hike, but because he forgot to charge his phone the night before or had problems charging it (maybe he lost/misplaced his charger?)
9:15 - Bill should have reached Juniper Flats trailhead based on his 8 AM location. But since he does not intend on going on any long hikes, he decides to start from the parts of the park that are east and/or south of Juniper Flats. He intends to see those attractions (Keys View? Skull Rock? Lost Horse Mine Trail?) first before driving north and/or west to Juniper Flats, which is closer to Pioneertown.
10:20 - Hiker Greg Mendoza arrives at Juniper Flats and notices that no other vehicles are present. Bill is still somewhere else in the park.
3:30 PM? - Bill arrives at Juniper Flats and heads west to Quail Mountain. He only goes a short distance, perhaps less than a mile, before he realizes that it is too much of a hike and too late in the day to get close enough to the mountain to see some nice views. He returns to his car and thinks he can squeeze in another small hike before dinner, so he decides to try out an adventurous route from Juniper Flats to Ryan Mountain.
5:30 to 6 PM - Mendoza returns and sees a white vehicle pointed west and notes fresh boot tracks heading west. These may have been from Bill's short afternoon hike in the direction of Quail Mountain.
7 PM? - Bill returns from Ryan Mountain but realizes that he does not have his phone, and possibly his wallet as well. He thinks he may have dropped it/them on his way back from Ryan Mountain, so he does a quick search to look for them and returns at sunset without finding anything. He decides to stay put and do a more thorough search for the item(s) the next morning, while it's still cool and before someone can find them.
Friday, June 25 -
6 - 11? AM - Bill searches the area near Ryan Mountain again and then decides to check out the trail leading to Quail Mountain after another unsuccessful search.
8:45 AM - David and Cheryl Haber arrive at Juniper Flats and notice a white vehicle pointed west.
10:30 - The Habers return to the trailhead and notice that the white vehicle is still there.
11? - Bill leaves to check other parts of JTNP that he went the day before so that he can find his missing items. He does not return to Juniper Flats until the following morning.
1:30 PM - Ranger Mike Grayson drives past the Juniper Flats trailhead and does not see Ewasko's vehicle either there or at Keys View or Lost Horse Mine.
Saturday, June 26 -
9 AM - Ranger Grayson checks Keys View and Juniper Flats again and does not see any vehicles at Juniper Flats.
10? - 2? PM - Bill drives back to Juniper Flats and searches again without finding anything.
1:15 PM - Park employee Mimi Gorman passes by Juniper Flats and notices a white vehicle pointed east.
2? - 4? - Bill searches a different part(s) of JTNP yet again without success before heading back to Juniper Flats. He searches Ryan Mountain one last time, suffers an injury or a rattlesnake bite, and never returns.
4:56 - A CHP helicopter observes Ewasko's vehicle at Juniper Flats pointed west.
6:46 - The search for Ewasko at Juniper Flats begins.
Sunday, June 27 -
6:50 AM - A desperate Ewasko manages to get reception for a very brief time and pings the Verizon cell tower on Serin Dr. Due to a typo or human error in reading the printout, the recorded 20.6 or 18.6 mile distance between the phone and the tower is mistakenly transcribed as 10.6 miles. It is also possible that someone else (let's call him Mr. X) found his phone and/or wallet on or before Saturday with the intention to return or steal it. Mr. X lives 10-ish miles away from the Serin Tower, in an area outside of JTNP. On Sunday morning, he powers up the phone to get information on its owner. But the phone's battery is low, and it only gets one brief ping out before it dies. Mr. X decides that it's not worth the hassle to return the phone, or he doesn't want to get traced and caught stealing a phone and possibly a wallet as well. In either case, he disposes of it.
If I lived near the area and had the time, I'd look for Bill in the sparsely searched areas east of Keys View Rd and near Ryan Mountain. The "diversion to Smith Water Canyon" theory never made much sense to me - If I ran out of water before reaching Quail Mountain, why would I go even further away from my car to get water? After filling up water in SWC, I'd run out of water again before reaching my car, even if the terrain wasn't that difficult. Heck, I might even get diarrhea from drinking the untreated water and end up losing even more fluids.
An alternate theory is that Bill almost reaches the summit of Quail Mountain before turning back and goes nowhere else (not Ryan Mountain or other areas of JTNP). He heads south and intends to return to his car, but gets lost/disoriented on the way back (like Ed Rosenthal did in another area of JTNP). He drops his bandanna as a marker since he can't find the trail and isn't sure where to go. He keeps going south, looking for a shelter from the afternoon heat. He moves at night to take advantage of the cooler weather and continues going south, lured by the bright lights of the Coachella Valley. But he gets injured on his descent through the rough terrain and/or succumbs to dehydration and never makes it to Dillon Rd.