NATION NOW

How two Californians helped capture Tennessee's most wanted man

Natalie Neysa Alund and Stacey Barchenger
The Tennessean

NASHVILLE — A northern California man said his property caretaker and a quick-thinking neighbor hatched a plan to keep Tad Cummins and Elizabeth Thomas in their sights after the duo showed up on his property Wednesday night.

A cabin where authorities say Tad Cummins held Elizabeth Thomas for more than a week in rural Northern California.

Michael "Monk" O'Hare, who said he was out of town that evening, owns property in the small, forested California hamlet of Cecilville, including the 12- by 12-foot wood cabin where he said the pair was found.

About 9:30 p.m Wednesday, the caretaker, Griffin Barry, 29, called O'Hare saying a man came to a nearby saloon and asked for work.

Griffin Barry, 29, contacted the Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office after seeing a news report and realizing that missing teen Elizabeth Thomas and her teacher Tad Cummins were the ones staying in the cabin. He said he is the property’s caretaker, and the cabin they used is behind him in this photo.

Barry said on Thursday that Cummins and Elizabeth showed up Tuesday. He agreed to help them after Cummins told him they had lost everything in a fire in Colorado and needed a place to stay.

Elizabeth gave Barry a different name, but otherwise didn’t talk, Barry said. Cummins did all the talking and said they had been at the Black Bear Ranch commune, but left because they didn’t like it there, according to Barry.

Yesterday, he said, Cummins and Elizabeth helped him fish rocks out of the creek.

“My caretaker was doing some rock lifting and agreed to give him so work,” said O'Hare, 41, who also owns the Salmon River Saloon.

"My neighbor noticed the car didn't have a license plate and there was a girl in the car that looked really young and never got out,” O'Hare said.

He said the neighbor noticed the man was acting strange and remembered a news article on the internet about the missing girl.

O'Hare said when the neighbor realized it was Cummins and Elizabeth, he alerted the caretaker.

“They were going to try and contain him but thought, ‘Naw, he’s supposed to be armed and dangerous.’” Cummins was on Tennessee's 10 Most Wanted list. His picture was circulated through the country after an Amber Alert was issued March 14, and authorities believed he had fled, taking one of his students — Elizabeth — with him.

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Cummins and Thomas had been in the cabin for about a week. When the caretaker and neighbor realized who they were, they hatched a plan to get Cummins to stay in the cabin for one more night.

They also called the sheriff.

About 4 a.m. Thursday, O'Hare said, the sheriff arrived, staked out the perimeter and waited for Cummins.

According to Barry, Siskiyou County deputies enlisted Barry's help in getting the two out of the cabin by going and waking them up to go back for rocks. He tried honking his horn but it didn’t work, so he hollered for them and eventually they emerged, he said.

About six hours later and 2,000 miles away in Tennessee, law enforcement officials announced Cummins was captured.

“We are all stoked she was found," O'Hare said. "We’re a pretty tight small-knit community that’s hours from the nearest police department. We police our own community with diligence. Neighbors, friends and community members.”

The nearest police station from the cabin, O'Hare said, is two hours away.

He recalled disbelief that the five-week, nationwide manhunt would end at his tiny cabin.

“When my neighbor called and told me, I thought, ‘Oh my God, no, we are way too far from (Tennessee),'" O'Hare said.

“The area is so remote, a lot of people come out there to hide It’s like a one-horse wilderness town. There’s no cellphone service for about 30 miles outside the town.”

Follow Natalie Neysa Alund and Stacey Barchenger on Twitter: @nataliealund and @sbarchenger