Wednesday, 17 December 2014

Did UVA rapist actually exist?





  • Friends of victim in UVA rape story paint different picture of alleged assault

  • Alex Stock: "There are definitely some major holes in the story"

  • An account of alleged rape in Rolling Stone was criticized

  • Ryan Duffin: "It's difficult to believe that she would have been acting"




(CNN) -- On a fall night two years ago, Jackie, the alleged victim of a brutal gang rape, recounted her story in vivid detail to two friends. She recalled the assault for Ryan Duffin and Alex Stock on picnic tables at the quaint University of Virginia campus.


"Her lips were quivering and (she) looked like somebody who had just been through some really traumatic experience," said Duffin, who met Jackie through a mutual friend at orientation. "I've never seen anyone look like that before. I really hope I never have to see anyone look like that again."


They sat outside a freshman dorm as she told of the shocking sexual assault, according to the friends. This was long before her account of the attack appeared in a now infamous Rolling Stone article published on November 19.


That harrowing account described how Jackie was lured to a fraternity house and allegedly raped by seven men at a Phi Kappa Psi party. The article sparked international outrage and portrayed the University of Virginia's response as cold and even tolerant of such horrific behavior.


Several weeks later, the magazine published an apology that raised questions about the authenticity of the story.





Rolling Stone: The magazine is to blame




New questions arise in UVA rape story




Friends: UVA's Jackie is overwhelmed




Rolling Stone editors reviewing mistakes

Duffin and Stock told CNN they remember a starkly different account than what appeared in Rolling Stone. Their version cast doubt over whether the man who allegedly orchestrated the attack even existed.


"I mean there are definitely some major holes in the story," said Stock, who also met Jackie through a mutual friend at summer orientation. "I think that that was pretty clear in the Rolling Stone piece... It was almost too perfect of a story."


Jackie's lawyer declined to comment to CNN for this article.


In its apology, Rolling Stone said of Jackie, The magazine later removed those words in an updated statement and said of its reporting errors, "These mistakes are on Rolling Stone, not on Jackie."


The magazine admitted that its writer had not contacted the man who allegedly brought about the attack. It said the writer didn't contact any of the men that Jackie claimed participated in the attack for fear of retaliation.


Duffin and Stock said they were never contacted by the magazine; instead, the writer portrayed them through Jackie's eyes.


"Rolling Stone is conducting a thorough internal review of the reporting, editing, and fact-checking of Sabrina Rubin Erdely's 'A Rape on Campus," the magazine said in a statement Tuesday.


If Jackie, who supposedly had a crush on Duffin, was indeed raped by the man her friends say went on a date with Jackie on the night of September 28, 2012, his behavior was more brazen that originally thought. CNN has obtained text messages and an email from the man who Jackie said lured her to the frat house, including one sent to Duffin days after the alleged assault.


Bombshell rape story triggers weeks of turmoil at the University of Virginia


Was Haven Monahan a real person?


Since summer orientation in 2012, Stock, Duffin and another freshman, Kathryn Hendley, had become friends with Jackie.


Duffin said Jackie was much more interested in him than he in her. He said he was happy when Jackie told friends that an upperclassman in her chemistry class asked her on a date.


Duffin and Stock decided to learn more about the upperclassman and check to "see if he's OK," Duffin said. Jackie gave them the phone number for the man, whom she identified as Haven Monahan.


Stock and Duffin said they sent him text messages and pretended to be another student from chemistry class. Monahan purportedly texted back, saying of Jackie, "I really like her," and describing her as "super smart .. hot" and liking the same music as he. At one point, he even sent a photo of himself.


Duffin never suspected Monahan may not be a real person.


"No," Duffin said, "at the time, it all seemed very real."


Jackie said she went on a date with Monahan the evening in late September 2012, when Rolling Stone reported that she was raped.





Is 'Rolling Stone' blaming rape victim?




Rolling Stone backs off UVA rape story




Opinion: UVA story always had 'red flags'

Late that night, Jackie called Duffin.


"She just said something bad had happened and could I come meet her," he recalled.


Duffin and Stock met her outside the first-year dorms. They sat at the picnic tables.


"It looked like she had been crying," Duffin remembered. "She was shaking... obviously just scared about something. And it looked like she thought somebody might just pop out of the dark and just grab her or something."


Jackie told her two friends that her date parked in front of the fraternity house, Duffin said. The man told her he had to go up to his room and asked whether she wanted to join him. She went with him.


"She then said that when she went into the house and went up the stairs, her date locked the door of the room once they got in there," Duffin said. "And she said that there were five other men in the room who she was then forced to perform oral sex on."


Stock said she was very upset.


Friends saw inconsistencies in story


"I didn't have any doubts that what she said happened had happened," he said.


But details of the assault chronicled in Rolling Stone didn't match what Jackie told her friends, the two men said.


In the article, for instance, she graphically describes a brutal gang rape by seven men instead of five. Oral sex was not mentioned. The article described her date as a man named "Drew" who she met "while working lifeguard shifts together at the university pool." In 2012, she told her friends his name was "Haven" and they had met in chemistry class.


The inconsistencies did not end there, according to Duffin and Stock.


The article described how she was beaten, struck about the face and left barefoot and bloodied. That's not what her friends remember.


"I didn't notice any sort of physical injuries," Duffin said. "I didn't notice a lack of shoes. I really didn't notice anything that was consistent with the physical description that was in the article."


Said Stock, "If there had been major injuries the way the article portrays, I think I would have remembered that."


A major criticism of the Rolling Stone article, titled "A Rape on Campus: A Brutal Assault and Search for Justice at UVA," was that the reporter did not seek comment from the alleged attackers. Discrepancies in the account were later reported by The Washington Post and other news outlets.


For instance, Phi Kappa Psi did not have a party the night Jackie said the rape occurred; the man she identified as her date that night was not a member of that fraternity.


Perhaps the biggest discrepancy was the Rolling Stone article's portrayal of how her friends reacted to news of the sexual assault: "The three friends launched into a heated discussion about the social price of reporting Jackie's rape while Jackie stood beside them, mute in her bloody dress."


The article quoted Cindy, whose was actually Hendley, saying: "Her reputation will be shot for the next four years."


Duffin and Stock said that Hendley wasn't even part of the conversation. Jackie didn't want the female friend to hear what happened. Kathryn waited about 25 feet away from the picnic table as Jackie spoke with her two male friends.


"That conversation never happened," said Duffin. "That whole entire conversation about debating the social price of reporting a rape, and any sort of detriment to a reputation that might come around from reporting a rape, absolutely never happened."


Hendley told CNN she was not part of the initial conversation.


"The things she said about me were completely off," Hendley said of Jackie. "It was a powerful part of the story, but it wasn't true."


They say Jackie didn't want to call police


The two friends said they tried desperately to convince Jackie to call the police. She decided against it, they said.


"I was really forceful in wanting to call the police," Duffin said. "I brought up the point a few times. But the reason we didn't call the police was because Jackie didn't want to. She didn't want to have to go through ... constant interrogation by police officers which would cause her to continually relive this traumatic event."


The two friends said they slept on the floor of Jackie's dorm to help her get through the night.


Five days later, Duffin said he inexplicably received an email titled "About You" from Haven, the man allegedly behind the alleged sexual assault. (When CNN tried the email address, the message came back "undeliverable.")


"It was from Haven Monahan ... and it looked like Haven had written, 'You should read this, I've never read anything nicer in my life,' with a page worth -- an essay -- that Jackie had written about me," Duffin said. "Which seemed really weird to me, even at the time, because here's somebody who allegedly just led a brutal sexual assault on a friend of mine, and now he's going to email me this thing about me?"


Jackie told her friends that Monahan dropped out of the university after the assault, but a university record check by CNN revealed that no one by that name ever attended the university. Another check found no one by that name in the United States.


The photo Monahan supposedly sent Duffin via text message matched that of a man who went to high school with Jackie in Stafford, Virginia.


"There's a very good chance whoever I was texting was Jackie," Stock said. "There's a definite possibility."


Jackie and her three friends drifted apart long before the Rolling Stone article, though her friends believe something bad may have happened to her that September night.


"I think it's very possible, yeah," Duffin said. "I still think it's extremely, extremely possible. If only because the reaction she had on that night seemed so strong, and seemed so genuine, that I still think it's difficult to believe that she would have been acting."



12 best places to spend Christmas






Christmas is a year-round occasion in this Midwest town of fewer than 3,000 residents. Santa Claus, Indiana, receives thousands of letters a year from children trying to reach St. Nick himself.Christmas is a year-round occasion in this Midwest town of fewer than 3,000 residents. Santa Claus, Indiana, receives thousands of letters a year from children trying to reach St. Nick himself.

The Three Kings parade through the streets in a magnificent cavalcade of floats. Canons are fired and fireworks are set off as the mayor hands the Magi the keys to the city.The Three Kings parade through the streets in a magnificent cavalcade of floats. Canons are fired and fireworks are set off as the mayor hands the Magi the keys to the city.

For Finns, Rovaniemi's location just north of the Arctic Circle is Christmas headquarters. Children make gingerbread cookies with Mrs. Claus, enroll in Elf School and write wish lists with a traditional quill.For Finns, Rovaniemi's location just north of the Arctic Circle is Christmas headquarters. Children make gingerbread cookies with Mrs. Claus, enroll in Elf School and write wish lists with a traditional quill.

Rockefeller Center's ice rink has been around for 77 years; the decorated tree is an 80-year-old tradition. Rockefeller Center's ice rink has been around for 77 years; the decorated tree is an 80-year-old tradition.

Nuremberg's Christmas Market Council is serious about making sure only traditional handmade toys and holiday goods are sold. No mass-produced plastic garlands here.Nuremberg's Christmas Market Council is serious about making sure only traditional handmade toys and holiday goods are sold. No mass-produced plastic garlands here.

Modern-day Victorians can enjoy a candlelit evening of stories from Charles Dickens, detailing Christmas traditions of yore. They're not all depressing.Modern-day Victorians can enjoy a candlelit evening of stories from Charles Dickens, detailing Christmas traditions of yore. They're not all depressing.

Rows of small, beautiful huts make up the Yule Town Christmas market on Ingólfstorg, where visitors can pick up Christmas gifts, decorations and snacks. Rows of small, beautiful huts make up the Yule Town Christmas market on Ingólfstorg, where visitors can pick up Christmas gifts, decorations and snacks.

Piñatas, posadas and ponche sum up the festivities in this colorful Mexican city, where Christmas is both a solemn and a celebratory affair.Piñatas, posadas and ponche sum up the festivities in this colorful Mexican city, where Christmas is both a solemn and a celebratory affair.

Strasbourg's Christmas program is packed with concerts and a special selection of cultural events from Croatia, the guest country at Strasbourg's Christmas celebrations this year.Strasbourg's Christmas program is packed with concerts and a special selection of cultural events from Croatia, the guest country at Strasbourg's Christmas celebrations this year.

Valkenburg's Velvet Cave is transformed into a Christmas market and the residence of Santa, where visitors can see his room of presents and reindeer sleigh. Valkenburg's Velvet Cave is transformed into a Christmas market and the residence of Santa, where visitors can see his room of presents and reindeer sleigh.









  • Visiting presepju, or nativity scenes, is an integral part of Christmas in Malta

  • The Arctic Snow Hotel in Finland is made entirely of snow and ice, but equipped with saunas and hot tubs

  • Christmas is a year-round occasion in Santa Claus, Indiana, a town of fewer than 3,000 residents




(CNN) -- Any old city can string up a few lights downtown and call it a holiday celebration.


From Mexico to Malta, northern lights to sunny skies, these places are doing Christmas better than the rest this year.


Bath, England


There are few cities in the world where you can celebrate the birth of Jesus and the birth of Jane Austen with the same amount of fanfare, but Bath happens to be one of them.


The Theatre Royal, which Austen mentions in "Northanger Abbey" and "Persuasion," is home to a musical celebration accompanied by mince pies and mulled wine in honor of the literary doyenne.


There's also a varied program of holiday drama, musicals, opera and concerts, including Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin.


A seasonal favorite, the 18-day Bath Christmas Market has over 170 wooden chalets selling distinctively British handmade crafts in a quaint Georgian setting.


Straddled between the imposing Bath Abbey and the venerable Roman Baths, the market offers a festive way to discover the character of Bath, which is the only entire city in the UK to have been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.


Bath on Ice is a great excuse to bundle up and lace up your skates, while the Thermae Bath Spa is the perfect reason to strip down and savor the steam emanating from the thermal mineral-rich waters of an open-air rooftop pool with spectacular views over the city.




When there\'s snow on the ground, New York can feel like the capital of Christmas.

When there's snow on the ground, New York can feel like the capital of Christmas.



New York


Rockefeller Center lies at the core of the New York Christmas.


Its famed ice rink has been around for 78 years; the decorated tree is an 81-year-old tradition.


Across the street, Radio City hosts the annual Christmas Spectacular, starring the Rockettes.


On the southwest corner of Central Park, Columbus Circle hosts more than 100 vendors selling clothes, gifts, snacks and drinks at the Holiday Market.


Central Park has two ponds for skating and horse-drawn carriage rides.


Fashion's biggest names join in the festivities, setting up impressive Christmas window displays.


The most glamorous cases, at the Fifth Avenue flagships and department stores like Saks and Bergdorf, are impressive enough to melt the heart of Anna Wintour.


MORE: World's most glamorous Christmas store windows




Malta\'s nativity experience includes grazing live animals.

Malta's nativity experience includes grazing live animals.



Malta


Visiting presepju, or nativity scenes, is an integral part of Christmas in Malta.


Every year, residents proudly open their shutters, and sometimes even their garage doors, to display their holy crib confections to the public.


On a grander scale, the Bethlehem f'Ghajnsielem is a life-size nativity experience spread over 20,0000 square meters of formerly abandoned fields.


Inhabited and animated by over 150 actors comprised of entire families, the village takes visitors back in time to Judea of 2,000 years ago, complete with oil lamps, turn mills, grazing animals, crafts areas teaching traditional skills and folklore, a tavern, and of course a grotto housing baby Jesus.


Downtown Valletta is also home to a lively Christmas spirit, with carolers singing outside the Baroque St. John's Co-Cathedral during advent, and a dizzying display of Christmas lights on Republic Street.


The Manoel Theater is well known for its annual Christmas pantomime -- this year Pinocchio themed.


A visit to the privately owned Museum of Toys featuring dolls, soldiers, train sets, and clockwork tin trinkets dating as far back as the 1790's, is a heartwarming homage to childhood.


Barcelona, Spain


If you can manage to extend your Christmas holiday until Three King's Day (January 5), there's no better place to catch up with Melchior, Gaspar and Balthazar than Barcelona.


On the evening of January 4, they arrive at the city's port on the Santa Eulalia -- their very own ship -- in bearded and velvet-robed splendor.


Canons are fired, fireworks are set off, and as the mayor hands them the keys to the city, the magic of the Magi officially commences.


They parade through the streets in a magnificent cavalcade of floats that includes camels, elephants, giraffes and dazzling costumes.


Rovaniemi, Lapland, Finland


While legends dating as far back as the 1820s cite the North Pole as the official home of Santa Claus and his jolly missus, the Finns would have us believe otherwise.


For them, Rovaniemi, Lapland, located just north of the Arctic Circle, is Christmas HQ.


Here, children make gingerbread cookies with Mrs. Claus, enroll in Elf School or take a calligraphy class and compose their Christmas wish lists with a traditional quill.


Other area attractions include the Ranua Zoo, home to baby polar bears, wolverines and moose; Sirmakko reindeer farm, where visitors can take a sled-led reindeer safari; and the Arktikum, a science center where the mystery of the northern lights is revealed.


Those in search of a truly frosty experience can stay in the Arctic Snow Hotel, made entirely of snow and ice, but equipped with saunas and hot tubs in which to thaw.


Nuremberg, Germany


The Nuremberg Christmas market (Nurnberger Christkindlesmarkt) is a German institution, pulling in more than 2 million visitors each year.


Highlights include a giant carved wooden Ferris wheel, old-fashioned carousel and steam train.


Unlike all those "fake" Christmas markets that have been popping up in the region, Nuremberg's Christmas Market Council is serious about making sure only traditional handmade toys and holiday goods are sold.


No mass-produced plastic garlands here.


The market's 200 select vendors also put up fantastic displays as they compete for the Most Beautiful Stall Design award.


The top three walk away with a gold, silver or bronze "Plum People" awards.


Adults can enjoy Nuremberg spicy gingerbread and mugs of mulled wine.


For kids, there's the Toy Museum, while the German Railway Museum is a hit with everyone.


MORE: Are there too many 'German' Christmas markets?


Quebec City, Canada


If you're the type who likes to celebrate Christmas around a tree made from recycled sheet metal, with lights powered by the pedaling of nearby cyclists, Quebec is your destination.


A haven for environmentally friendly, outdoor enthusiasts, the city bustles with activity, offering holiday programs for all tastes.


Modern-day Victorians can enjoy a candlelit evening of stories from Charles Dickens, recounting the Christmas traditions of yore.


Sausage and roast chestnut lovers can browse the wares at the German Christmas market.


The more religiously inclined can wander an exposition of nativity scenes from around the world.


The nearby Sentier des Caps de Charlevoix offers family-friendly hiking, snowshoeing and skiing, while speed devils can zoom around in a snowmobile from Nord Expe.




Iceland delivers a festive Christmas.

Iceland delivers a festive Christmas.



Reykjavik, Iceland


When it comes to Christmas celebrations, Iceland has a few peculiarities.


Among these, 13 "Yuletide Lads" (scruffy Santas) are said to bring gifts to nice children for the 13 nights leading to Christmas.


Rows of small, beautiful huts make up the Yule Town Christmas market on Ingolfstorg.


Here, visitors can pick up colorful Christmas gifts, decorations and treats.


The shopping differs day to day as some craftsmen and designers set up stalls for only one day.


Beaming down onto a city covered in snow and Christmas lights, northern lights displays add to Reykjavik's festival feel.


MORE: How to be a Reykjaviker: 8 ways to be cool in Iceland


San Miguel de Allende, Mexico


Piñatas, posadas and ponche sum up the festivities in this colorful Mexican city, where Christmas is both a solemn and celebratory affair.


Leading up to December 24, you're likely to stumble upon Mary and Joseph strolling the streets, as locals make pilgrimages from home to home, singing to "ask for posada" or "beg for shelter" as they reenact the journey to Bethlehem.


Pinatas and ponche (a mulled fruit drink) cap a long evening of peregrinations around this cobblestoned city, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its wealth of grand churches, well-preserved architecture and grand zocalos.


Santa Claus, Indiana


Christmas is a year-round occasion in this town of fewer than 3,000 residents.


Santa Claus, Indiana, receives thousands of letters a year from children trying to reach St. Nick himself.


A group of volunteers called Santa's Elves was set up in the mid-1930s to reply to each letter.


The Land of Lights display is a 1.2-mile drive around the Lake Rudolph Campground & RV Resort.


Among various Christmas-themed events, Santa hosts a buffet dinner at the Christmas Lodge every Friday leading up to Christmas.


Strasbourg, France


Strasbourg's series of themed Christmas villages morph the city into a visual and gastronomic wonderland.


Visitors can head to the Village of Alsace Farmhouse to taste prune, apricot and other holiday-inspired variations of farm-fresh foie gras.


The nearby Village of Bredle is supplied with its namesake traditional Christmas biscuits and copious amounts of mulled Alsatian wine.


From the Strasbourg Philharmonic to gospel to Django Reinhardt-inspired gypsy jazz, Strasbourg's Christmas program is packed with concerts and cultural events from Croatia, the guest country of Strasbourg's Christmas celebrations this year.


MORE: 8 top Christmas markets in Europe


Valkenburg, The Netherlands


This small town is the Dutch center for Christmas festivities.


Valkenburg's Velvet Cave is transformed into a Christmas Market and the residence of Santa, where visitors can see his room of presents and reindeer sleigh.


The cavern houses sculptures and an 18th-century chapel, as well as preserved mural drawings that date to Roman times.


Marlstone products and traditional Polish handicrafts are a few of the unique items exclusive to Valkenburg's Christmas markets.


Best way to reach the Christmas town? A Christmas Express train that runs regularly between Simpelveld and Valkenburg.


MORE: 10 best cities for a winter vacation


Originally published December 2013, updated December 2014.



Ultimate heli-ski experience






If carving out a fresh ski trail isn't enough for you, the Pantheon Heli Ranch will get you coveted first descents on new runs and then let you name them.If carving out a fresh ski trail isn't enough for you, the Pantheon Heli Ranch will get you coveted first descents on new runs and then let you name them.

The only colors you'll see on the snow white mountains are the blur of green trees and blue glaciers as you fly down the slope. As you leave deep channels and white smoke in your wake, you'll also catch some air from the knobs and drifts of the forest.The only colors you'll see on the snow white mountains are the blur of green trees and blue glaciers as you fly down the slope. As you leave deep channels and white smoke in your wake, you'll also catch some air from the knobs and drifts of the forest.

Despite the area being covered with glaciers from the ice age, the lakes offer a very pleasant swim during the summer. After a heli-hike, a quick dip is a great way to cool down.Despite the area being covered with glaciers from the ice age, the lakes offer a very pleasant swim during the summer. After a heli-hike, a quick dip is a great way to cool down.

Professional guides can help you track down grizzlies in the valley. But if you're really lucky, the bears come to you at Tweedsmuir Park Lodge.Professional guides can help you track down grizzlies in the valley. But if you're really lucky, the bears come to you at Tweedsmuir Park Lodge.

Glaciers formed in the last ice age blanket the Coast Mountains. During the winter, 30 meters of snow piles up for great alpine and cross country skiing.Glaciers formed in the last ice age blanket the Coast Mountains. During the winter, 30 meters of snow piles up for great alpine and cross country skiing.

Trout can be caught year round in the Bella Coola Valley. If you're going to test your patience with fishing, you should also have a majestic scene in the Atnarko River to enjoy.Trout can be caught year round in the Bella Coola Valley. If you're going to test your patience with fishing, you should also have a majestic scene in the Atnarko River to enjoy.


When the snow gods deliver, they dump knee-high weightless snow at your feet.

When the snow gods deliver, they dump knee-high weightless snow at your feet.

After an intense day of heli-skiing and hiking, Tweedsmuir Park Lodge awaits with an outdoor hot tub, teepee sweat lodge and majestic mountain views.After an intense day of heli-skiing and hiking, Tweedsmuir Park Lodge awaits with an outdoor hot tub, teepee sweat lodge and majestic mountain views.


When the weather is too rough to heli-ski, the copter can take you to the town of Bella Coola -- population 852 -- which the Nuxalk First Nation calls home.

When the weather is too rough to heli-ski, the copter can take you to the town of Bella Coola -- population 852 -- which the Nuxalk First Nation calls home.

The Thorsen Creek petroglyphs are a collection of mysterious rock carvings of human faces, animals and geometric patterns near the Big Cedar Trail. The origins are still debated, but it's little wonder the First Nations peoples consider this place sacred.The Thorsen Creek petroglyphs are a collection of mysterious rock carvings of human faces, animals and geometric patterns near the Big Cedar Trail. The origins are still debated, but it's little wonder the First Nations peoples consider this place sacred.

"Wow, this place is on steroids," Beat Steiner recalls of his first visit 14 years ago. "Everything about it is big. The trees are big. The mountains are big. The glaciers are big. The biggest fjords in the Americas. It's all big.""Wow, this place is on steroids," Beat Steiner recalls of his first visit 14 years ago. "Everything about it is big. The trees are big. The mountains are big. The glaciers are big. The biggest fjords in the Americas. It's all big."









  • The highest peak in the Coast Mountains is Mt. Waddington at 4,019 meters

  • Coast Mountain's rugged landscape doubled for the Himalayas in feature films "Seven Years in Tibet" and "Kundun"

  • Guests at Pantheon Heli Ranch can ski uncharted terrain then name the new run




(CNN) -- I'm knee deep in the icy Atnarko River in central British Columbia. A belt is cinched across my chest waders to prevent water from dragging me under if I slip in.


Cougar tracks are pressed into the snow on the bank.


At least the grizzlies, which feast on spawning salmon here each fall, are napping this time of year.


On this morning, my guide Jai Condon demonstrates the art of fly-fishing.


He flicks the rod. Whoosh, whoosh, whoosh. And, releases.


"How do you lay the line down so nicely?" someone asks.


"Practice," he says, laughing.


I'm terrible. I don't get a nibble even though trout can be caught year round in the Bella Coola Valley, about 1,000 kilometers north of Vancouver. I didn't come here to fish, but I'm hooked.


Magical geography


Heavy fog scuttles my first full day of heli-snowboarding.


But Bella Coola Heli Sports has a genius Plan B, C, D, and so on, for the inevitable down days.


Conceived as an exclusive year-round resort appealing to the hard-core athlete looking for the kind of snow porn experience they've seen in ski movies, Bella Coola also keeps the grumpy, grounded adventurer content.


MORE: Monster truck vs. volcano: On safari in explosive Iceland


Depending on the season, there's cross-country skiing, hiking, biking, rafting, horseback riding, grizzly bear watching, and even, cattle ranching. (Help during calving and ski in the afternoon. Yes, really.)


A helicopter or boat (based on your level of indulgence) will also ferry guests to the fjords to soak in natural hot springs followed by a polar plunge in the Pacific Ocean.




Plan A: heli-skiing. Plan B: heli-hiking.

Plan A: heli-skiing. Plan B: heli-hiking.



"We didn't come here for the vertical," says Kristina Enquist, visiting from Finland with her husband, Eric.


"We came here for the whole experience."


The region's magical geography is what attracted a trio of filmmakers -- Christian Begin, Peter "Swede" Mattsson and Beat Steiner -- here 14 years ago.


Glaciers that date back to the last ice age blanket the Coast Mountains, which erupt from sea level to its highest peak, Mt. Waddington, at 4,019 meters.


This landscape doubled for the Himalayas in feature films "Seven Years in Tibet" and "Kundun." Sir Edmund Hillary even trained here.


And, 30 meters of snow piles up annually.


"Wow, this place is on steroids," Steiner recalls of his first visit.


"Everything about it is big. The trees are big. The mountains are big. The glaciers are big. The biggest fjords in the Americas. It's all big."


While the heli-ski industry was booming along the spine of the continent, nobody was operating here. The three mountain men applied for, and to their surprise, secured 10,700 square kilometers of terrain.


"Everybody was busy fighting in the interior," says Begin.


"We grabbed the jewel. We grabbed the coast."


MORE: Retro safari does Dubai's deserts in style


'Rock star treatment'


Since 2003, Bella Coola has whisked guests from Vancouver to this remote paradise.


The one-hour flight in a Beechcraft 1900C is as spectacular as Steiner describes, if not stomach churning.


Jet-lagged tourists from the United States, the United Kingdom, Finland, Slovakia and Thailand are also aboard and head to lessons in helicopter and avalanche safety.


Skiing upon arrival is part of the outfitter's "rock star" treatment.


But the conditions are awful. Heavy snowfall, followed by a warm spell and a freeze means there's an extreme avalanche risk.


I cut my edges into a layer of crust harder than week-old pizza.




Lounge around while you can.

Lounge around while you can.



After a few teeth-chattering runs, we land at Tweedsmuir Park Lodge where guests acquaint themselves with the outdoor hot tub and teepee sweat lodge or gorge on salmon.


Bella Coola operates three lodges where a maximum of 34 guests a week never have to fight for fresh turns.


Meanwhile, other heli-ski operators run dozens of people per day over much smaller tenures, which, according to Mattsson, isn't private enough for his clientele.


Those with especially deep pockets book the Pantheon Heli Ranch where up to eight guests have exclusive use of 4,450 square kilometers of terrain. They also get coveted first descents.


Test a run that has never been skied and then name it. The cost: $105,260 ($114,800 Canadian) a week.


Typical guests are executives, doctors, celebrities; those aged 45 to 55. Almost all are men.


"It's always been a kind of a boy's club," Mattsson says. "I think heli-skiing is overall."


MORE: World's 100 best ski runs


'Secret weapon'


Richard Lapointe is a former military pilot who has flown stunt jets, search and rescue missions and in conflict zones.


He's at the stick of my ride, an AStar B2 helicopter that seats only four guests.


He's also what my guide calls a "secret weapon."


Lapointe sneaks between impossibly tight rock faces and lands on plateaus the size of picnic tables in search of powder.


The snow gods have also delivered. A dump of weightless snow is up to my knees. I rack up 13,840 vertical meters of fresh lines in two days.


I glide by vast blue glaciers in the alpine, the only color on an endless canvas of untracked white.


Knobs and drifts in the forests send me airborne. My powder board leaves a deep channel -- and white smoke -- in my wake.




Once you\'ve powdered through these mountains, even Whistler will lose its rush.

Once you've powdered through these mountains, even Whistler will lose its rush.



"You know junkies looking for their next fix? says Eric Enquist, the more daring half of the Finnish couple. "Now, I know what they were talking about."


Nobody is oblivious to the danger as we pick through recent avalanche debris and watch an ice sheet give way from a mountainside.


Condon, my fishing guide, later returns to the lodge cradling a block of that ancient ice. Chipped into glasses of scotch and other libations, I'm happy to have it dilute my spirits.


On my last day -- another when the helicopter can't fly -- Begin takes a group to the town of Bella Coola, population 852, which the Nuxalk First Nation calls home. The influence of aboriginal peoples, who have been in the region for 10,000 years, is everywhere.


Totem poles dot the streets.


Along Big Cedars Trail, an old-growth forest with massive trees features one that has been hollowed out to smoke fish.


It smells of meat.


Not far away, but tough to find without a guide, are the Thorsen Creek petroglyphs, a collection of mysterious rock carvings.


Brushing off a light dusting of snow, we find dozens of etchings of human faces, animals and geometric patterns.


The origins are still debated, but it's little wonder First Nations peoples consider this place sacred.


As I step back into the present, I learn all flights home are scrubbed due to strong winds and heavy snow.


I'm told this is a once-a-year event, leaving me happily stranded in Shangri-La.


Bella Coola Heli Sports ; Whistler, British Columbia; +1 604 932 3000


Fly: Pacific Coastal Airlines departs daily from South Terminal at the Vancouver International Airport.


Ferry: B.C. Ferries from Port Hardy on the north coast of Vancouver Island.


Drive: 12-14 hours from Vancouver


Heli-ski rates vary December to April and packages range from three to seven nights. For a standard week, prices start at $9,786 to $11,435 plus tax ($10,680-$12,480 Canadian) including the flight from Vancouver.


Summer and fall rates at Tweedsmuir Lodge include a two-night minimum, and during peak grizzly bear season, which runs Sept. 1-Oct. 14, guests must book three- to five-night packages at $2,272 to $3,555 ($2,480-- $3,880 Canadian)



Suspect in family killings found dead





  • Schools will reopen in Upper Perkiomen at regular times

  • An injured teen remains in serious condition, with cutting wounds

  • Bradley William Stone appears to die from self-inflicted wounds

  • He is suspected of killing his ex-wife and five relatives




(CNN) -- A Pennsylvania district attorney says there may never be closure in the case of a man suspected of killing his ex-wife and five former in-laws.


"There's no excuse; there's no valid explanation. There's no justification for snuffing out these six innocent lives and then injuring another child. This is just a horrific tragedy," Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman told reporters Tuesday.


The body of the suspect, Bradley William Stone, was found with what looked to be self-inflicted wounds.


The former Marine reservist had been on the run since Monday's slayings shook small communities north of Philadelphia.


Although a final report from the coroner is pending, Stone appears to have died from self-inflicted cutting wounds, in the center of his body, according to Ferman.


His body was found in a wooded area about 1/2 mile from his home in Pennsburg. It was not immediately clear how long the remains had been there.


"When you look at the three different locations, the number of people killed, clearly we are looking at a premeditated killing -- a planned killing, an intentional, deliberate killing," said Ferman.


The slayings


The killings broke the calm in several small towns in Montgomery County, the second wealthiest county in Pennsylvania and the 51st wealthiest in the United States, according to the county government web page.


Early Monday morning, a hangup call to 911 first tipped off police to the bloodshed, directing them to Lansdale, 28 miles northwest of Philadelphia.


When police arrived, they found two slain women: Stone's former mother-in-law and former grandmother-in-law, Ferman said.


A short time later, a neighbor of Stone's ex-wife called 911, the prosecutor explained. Police went to an apartment in Lower Salford and found 33-year-old Nicole Stone dead.


"I heard three or four gunshots and I heard the kids yelling, saying, 'Mommy, no. No, mommy, no.' And he just said, 'Let's go. We gotta go,'" a neighbor who did not want to be identified told CNN affiliate WFMZ. "I heard him say, 'Let's go. We gotta get in the car.'"


"They didn't have any coats on or anything," the neighbor said. "They just had their pajamas on, and he just said, 'We gotta go.' He was like, 'She's hurt. She's hurt pretty bad. We have to leave.' And just got in the car and sped off."







In addition to Nicole Stone, her mother, grandmother and sister were found dead, as well as the sister's husband and 14-year-old daughter, Ferman said.


The sister's 17-year-old son was being treated at a Philadelphia hospital. Ferman said that the teen, who sustained cutting injuries to his hands and head, was in serious condition.


But Stone didn't harm his two daughters, who were living with his former wife. At about 5:30 a.m., he brought them to a neighbor's residence in Pennsburg, according to Ferman.


"That was the last time he was seen by anyone," the attorney said. "I think it's of great significance the children are safe right now."


Ferman said Stone and his ex-wife had been involved with ongoing and contentious custody disputes.


"We learned that just last week he had made an effort in court to try to secure custody -- emergency custody of the children -- and that was denied," she said.


Who is Stone?


According to Montgomery County court documents found online, the Stones divorced in 2009.


Fast Facts: Rampage killings in the United States


Stone served as a reservist in the U.S. Marines until 2011, mainly as a meteorologist, according to the Marines. He spent a few months in Iraq in 2008.


William Schafte of Harleysville, who described himself as a friend, called Stone a "caring guy" who loved his country.


"I was totally shocked. I didn't really think that he was capable of doing such a horrific thing like this," he told CNN's "The Lead with Jake Tapper."


"He would ... go the extra mile to help anybody out. This is just, it's a total shock to me and to his other friends."


Stone served as president of the American Legion William E. Hare Post 206 in Lansdale about a decade ago, said current post commander John Gillmer, the Morning Call newspaper of Allentown reported.


"He was always on the honor guard and stuff like that for parades," Gillmer told the Morning Call. "I couldn't believe it. ... I never would have thought it was one of our guys."


The Upper Perkiomen School District called off classes Tuesday. Following the announcement of Stone's death, it said schools would reopen at regular times Wednesday.


CNN's Shimon Prokupecz, Susan Candiotti, Ed Payne, Ralph Ellis, Kristina Sgueglia and Lawrence Crook contributed to this report.



5 signs of U.S. love for public transit






Ridership aboard U.S. public transportation in 2014 is expected to top last year's figures. 2013 saw more riders on public transportation than any year since 1956, according to the American Public Transportation Association. Denver's revamped Union Station transportation center helped increase the city's third-quarter light rail ridership by 6.3%, according to APTA. Bus riders increased by .75%.Ridership aboard U.S. public transportation in 2014 is expected to top last year's figures. 2013 saw more riders on public transportation than any year since 1956, according to the American Public Transportation Association. Denver's revamped Union Station transportation center helped increase the city's third-quarter light rail ridership by 6.3%, according to APTA. Bus riders increased by .75%.

Sound Transit, which serves Washington state's central Puget Sound area, reported a 14.13% rise in riders from July through September. Sound Transit, which serves Washington state's central Puget Sound area, reported a 14.13% rise in riders from July through September.

In Boston, third-quarter 2014 subway ridership topped 5%.In Boston, third-quarter 2014 subway ridership topped 5%.

New York City subway ridership rose 5.18% July through September. New York City subway ridership rose 5.18% July through September.

LYNX -- a light rail line serviced by the Charlotte Area Transit System -- reported a third-quarter ridership increase of 5.05%. LYNX -- a light rail line serviced by the Charlotte Area Transit System -- reported a third-quarter ridership increase of 5.05%.

Ridership on Utah Transit Authority streetcars increased 6.44% during the third-quarter of 2014. Ridership on Utah Transit Authority streetcars increased 6.44% during the third-quarter of 2014.

In Oregon, Portland's success with its streetcars in the early 2000s helped spur similar projects around the nation. Third-quarter 2014 ridership on the city's streetcars is up .55%.In Oregon, Portland's success with its streetcars in the early 2000s helped spur similar projects around the nation. Third-quarter 2014 ridership on the city's streetcars is up .55%.









  • The United States is on track to top 2013 ridership on public transportation

  • Despite plummeting gas prices, ridership is still rising

  • Several cities are adding trolley lines and new transit centers

  • Proposed regional railroad lines are moving forward in Florida, Illinois and Texas




(CNN) -- You could call it a budding romance with the possibility of a strong, long-lasting relationship. More Americans are riding public transportation.


Upwardly trending statistics show it's not just a meaningless crush.


These newcomers -- many thought to be in their 20s and 30s and living in the nation's medium-sized cities -- are joining a love affair that rail-riders and strap-hangers in Chicago and the Northeast have known for generations.


After decades of embracing car culture, experts report growing movement out of the driver's seat and into transit stations.


The change is a reflection of a "do-more-with-less economy" where jobs often pay less than they used to and are harder to hold onto. For many, the cost of owning, insuring and maintaining a vehicle outweighs the value of its function.


The commuter culture got tired of traffic snarls and parking headaches. We may be seeing a statistical movement partially fueled by a generation that's more concerned than their parents about cutting air pollution.


Related story: Opinion: Give up your cars


Dubious? Here are five signs America may be falling in love with public transportation:


1. More Americans are taking mass transit.


Ridership is experiencing a winning streak.


The nation is on track to top 2013's annual ridership, which was the highest since 1956.


Third-quarter figures released Wednesday from the American Public Transportation Association show rising ridership nationwide for 12 of the past 15 quarters.


From July through September of this year, total U.S. trips on commuter rail, subways, buses, streetcars and trolleys topped 2.7 billion. That's an increase of 1.81%.


The increases are happening across the country in cities such as Seattle, Minneapolis and Albany, New York, APTA reports.


Some cities set records, including St. Petersburg, Florida, as well as Oakland, California.


The new figures prove "a dramatic change in public attitude as more people are demanding public transportation services," said Michael Melaniphy, APTA president and CEO in an e-mail to CNN.


And while ridership increases, gasoline prices are plummeting.


This week, the national average for a gallon of regular unleaded gas hit $2.55, a five-year low.


You might think falling gasoline prices would result in a big ridership drop off as driving suddenly becomes more affordable.


But according to a 2012 APTA study, when the cost of fuel goes down, many riders tend to continue using public transit. The drop-off rate from low gas prices doesn't match the ridership increase that happens when gas prices shoot sky-high.


2. Americans are breaking up with their cars.


Since 2007, Americans have been driving less, breaking a trend that had been rising for more than two decades.


In addition, an October report from consumer group U.S. PIRG shows driving and car ownership is trending down among younger Americans and is likely to keep doing so.


Some commuters may be dumping their cars to save money.


The public transportation industry says commuters could gain an average annual savings of $9,635 by taking public transit instead of driving.


3. Cities think streetcars and trolleys are totally hot.


In Oregon, Portland's success with its streetcars in the early 2000s helped spur similar projects around the nation.


New streetcar projects are in service, under construction or being planned in Atlanta; Charlotte, North Carolina; Cincinnati; Dallas; Detroit; Kansas City, Missouri; Salt Lake City; Tucson, Arizona; and Washington.


Supporters say:


-- Streetcars can create economic growth by attracting shoppers from outlying areas to downtown.


-- They're convenient because they're easy on/easy off.


-- Tourists love 'em.


Critics aren't so sure. They talk about the cost of streetcar infrastructure and they wonder how efficient streetcars can be if ridership isn't constantly high.


4. More city transit centers: New meet markets?


Several city planners are pinning their hopes on spectacular new transportation facilities that combine transportation with other activities such as shopping and eating.


One of these just opened this month in Anaheim, California. It's called the ARTIC, Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodel Center, KNBC reports. It boasts access to buses and regional and interstate rail lines. It's got bike lockers for the two-wheeled traveler. Price tag: $180 million.


Similar facilities are proposed in San Francisco, the Chronicle reports, and in Newport News, Virginia, according to WAVY. Near Denver, a project is under construction which aims to connect the airport, a new Westin hotel and an 82,000-square-foot plaza to the city via a new rail line. Critics fear it will balloon well beyond its $500-million-plus budget, the Denver Post reported.


In Denver's Lower Downtown district, the city unveiled its renovated Union Station transportation center earlier this year. It's already been credited with spurring a rise in ridership. Denver Regional Transportation District CEO Phillip Washington said the revamped station makes the city "the mother of all transit-oriented communities."


In South Florida, the Miami Intermodal Center -- expected to be finished soon -- will mashup just about every mode of transportation possible: airport, Amtrak, local rail, rental cars and buses, the Miami Herald reports.


5. The rise of regional transit: Long-distance relationships


These days, jobs are where you find them, not necessarily where you live. Supporters say the need for faster, affordable mass transit between nearby cities has never been greater.


Utah Transit Authority's light-rail line called TRAX has connected communities within the sprawling Salt Lake County for 15 years. Since 2008, the UTA intercity commuter railroad called FrontRunner has reached out ever farther with a corridor connecting Provo, Salt Lake City and Pleasant View along about 90 miles of track.


Now, commuter rail lines have been proposed connecting other regional cities -- such as Chicago with St. Louis, Dallas with Houston and Orlando's airport with downtown Miami.