On August 2, 2023

Missing hiker found dead by KSAR

 

Flooding was likely the culprit that led to fatality

Staff report

The Vermont State Police (VSP) located the body of a man believed to be missing Appalachian Trail hiker Robert Kerker, 67, of Rhinebeck, New York on Friday, July 28.

Police said search crews located Kerker’s body along Stony Brook in Stockbridge about 1.5 miles downstream from where the trail crossed the brook around 2:30 p.m.

 Crews had focused efforts Friday on the brook after a witness reported seeing Kerker at the Stony Brook Shelter on the Appalachian Trail the night of July 9. 

He was known to have been at the Inn at Long Trail in Killington prior, police said.

The witness said severe rain and flooding that struck Vermont starting July 10 had elevated water levels on the Stony Brook and made the trail’s crossing of the stream dangerous. Kerker is not known to have been seen again following that encounter.

 The VSP Search and Rescue Team, Killington Search and Rescue, the Killington Police Department, the Department of Motor Vehicles and New England K9 Search and Rescue participated in the effort Friday afternoon to recover Kerker’s remains. 

Five members of the Killington Search and Rescue team responded and one member found Kerker on ATV after  a 3-hour search.  

“It was an unfortunate outcome,” Killington Police Chief Whit Montgomery said. “A number of us were able to get him out on a liter.” 

Montgomery said floodwaters had receded. 

“If we had gone in earlier he may not have been found or it could have impacted (the search),” Montgomery said. “The water had receded enough to not make it difficult.”

An autopsy conducted by the Chief Medical Examiner’s Office officially determined Aug. 1 that Kerker’s cause of death “was a probable drowning, and the manner of death an accident that occurred when Kerker was caught in the current of a brook” while hiking the trail in the storms.

Kerker was an experienced hiker who began his trek on the Appalachian Trail on June 1 in Bear Mountain, New York.

State officials confirmed, Tuesday, Aug. 1 that Kerker’s was the second death related to July’s catastrophic flooding.

The first flood victim was Stephen Davoll, 63, who died July 12, when he drowned in his flooded basement in Barre, officials said. 

In response to a question at Tuesday’s press conference, Public Safety Commissioner Jennifer Morrison said a “preliminary assessment” found that the death of 25-year-old Katie Hartnett, of Burlington, was not caused by flooding as had been previously suspected. Vermont State Police reported last month that Hartnett died after slipping and falling into the Huntington River in Richmond on July 14. Her body was recovered from the river the next day.

Morrison said she was not sure whether the final investigation into Hartnett’s death was complete.

Emergency officials have said that the determinations of whether deaths are formally linked to flooding are based on a number of factors, including autopsy results and federal determinations of the disaster’s “incident period.” Families of flood victims in counties covered by the federal disaster declaration may be eligible for grants for funeral expenses. 

Maggie Cassidy and Lola Duffort/VTDigger contributed to this reporting.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

James T. Bowse Health Trust announces 2025 grant awards

December 26, 2024
On Thursday, Dec. 11, Rutland Regional Medical Center’s James T. Bowse Health Trust (BHT) committee announced funding for three important projects in the Rutland region. The ARC-Rutland Area, Inc., Come Alive Outside, and the Tapestry Program of Rutland City Public Schools have been awarded funds over the next three years to implement important projects in…

Pico Foundation benefits from Turkey Trot

December 26, 2024
The Killington Turkey Trot presented a check for $15,000 to the Pico Ski Education Foundation. Pictured from left to right: Kasie Munson, Killington Turkey Trot, Dan Cole, VP PSEF, and Missy Karr, president PSEF.

Vermont’s outdoor rec economy grows to $2.1 billion

December 26, 2024
Green Mountain State maintains No. 2 ranking for outdoor recreation as part of GDP New data released by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) on Dec. 19 reinforces outdoor recreation’s significant and growing impact on Vermont’s economy. The BEA found outdoor recreation created $2.1 billion in value added for Vermont in 2023, accounting for…

Long-time Killington Town Clerk, Treasurer Lucrecia Wonsor passes torch to Peggy Neisner and Monika Legayda

December 26, 2024
By Karen D. Lorentz Friday, Dec. 20, was Town Clerk and Treasurer Lucrecia Wonsor's final day on the job after working 24 years for the town of Killington. Peggy Neisner, CMC, who stepped into the role of assistant town clerk in November 2021 was appointed the new town clerk by the Select Board on Dec.…