FBI searches area around campground where Travis Decker's 3 daughters were found dead
Search for Travis Decker continues with new resources
Federal, state, and local law enforcement have closed several campgrounds near Leavenworth for a two-day "boots on the ground" search for Travis Decker, the father wanted for the May murder of his three young daughters.
The FBI conducted a two-day search through dense and rugged terrain in Washington state in the hopes of finding clues to the whereabouts of Travis Decker nearly three months after he allegedly killed his three young daughters.
Investigators still have no evidence about whether Decker is alive or dead, Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison and Peter Orth, the FBI's supervisory senior resident agent in Yakima, said during a news conference Monday.
"You can't be too thorough in a search like this," Orth said. "It is such incredibly dense vegetation that anybody who walks down one of these trails could walk 10 meters off the trail and no one would ever know they're there."
Decker, a former and trained military survivalist, has been wanted since June 2, when the bodies of his three daughters – Paityn, 9, Evelyn, 8, and Olivia, 5 – were discovered at the Rock Island Campground in the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest.
This photo provided by FBI Seattle shows several law enforcement agencies participating in the search for Travis Decker, who was charged with murder and kidnapping, at Rock Island Campground near Leavenworth, Wa. on Monday, August. 25, 2025. (FBI via AP)
A deputy found the bodies of the girls inside a truck with their hands bound and plastic bags over their heads three days after their mother reported them missing when Decker failed to return the children from a court-mandated custody visit, authorities have said.
"We will not relent. We will not give up," Morrison said Monday, adding that "the girls would not want us to give up."
This photo provided by FBI Seattle shows the entrance to Rock Island Campground where multiple law enforcement agencies are participating in the search for Travis Decker, who was charged with murder and kidnapping, near Leavenworth, Wa. on Monday, Au (FBI via AP)
Authorities closed popular campgrounds and trailheads in the forest near Leavenworth to allow about 100 FBI agents and other law enforcement officers to bushwhack through the rugged terrain.
Divers planned to search Icicle Creek to reach areas where logjams had previously barred dive teams, while other investigators conducted a grid search in a quarter-mile radius around the campground, officials said.
This photo provided by FBI Seattle shows a closed road to Rock Island Campground where multiple law enforcement agencies are participating in the search for Travis Decker, who was charged with murder and kidnapping, near Leavenworth, Wa. on Monday, A (FBI via AP)
Morrison said that if Decker is still alive in the wilderness, he believes he must be "pretty tired by now."
"He's got to be perfect every single day; we just have to be perfect once," Morrison said.
Authorities confirmed last week that Decker is the sole suspect in the alleged murders, saying that his DNA was found at the crime scene. No additional DNA profiles were detected.
"If it's not me wearing this uniform, it'll be another Chelan County Sheriff … We will find him, in one fashion or another," Morrison said.
Man mistaken for Travis Decker speaks with FOX 13
Mistaken for a murderer, Nick from Idaho says he was camping in the Sawtooth National Forest during the 4th of July weekend, and he spoke to FOX 13 about the moment he realized U.S. Marshals were looking for him after being mistaken for Washington triple-murder suspect Travis Decker.
What you can do:
The U.S. Marshals Service is offering a reward of up to $20,000 for information leading to Decker’s capture.
Anyone with information about Decker's whereabouts is urged to contact the U.S. Marshals Service or call 911 immediately.
Tips can also be submitted to the U.S. Marshals Service Communications Center at 1-800-336-0102 or online.
Fox News Digital’s Julia Bonavita and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
The Source: Information in this story came from FBI Seattle and the Chelan County Sheriff's Office.