Sunday, 22 Mar 2026

Murder in small-town America: The crimes that tore quiet communities apart in 2025

Small towns across the United States faced shocking violence in 2025, exposing deep vulnerabilities in quiet communities from Mississippi to Montana.


Murder in small-town America: The crimes that tore quiet communities apart in 2025

In 2025, idyllic small towns across America were interrupted by acts of violence from Mississippi to Montana, Arkansas to Washington state.

The murders struck during homecoming weekends, inside neighborhood bars, at campgrounds and along hiking trails.

Together, the cases exposed vulnerabilities in small-town America: unresolved personal disputes, untreated mental health crises and domestic violence.

Clinton Brink, 43, and Cristen Brink, 41, the parents of three children, were stabbed to death while hiking at Devil's Den State Park on July 26.

The couple had recently moved to Arkansas to be closer to family and begin a new chapter. Friends described them as gentle, active and devoted parents.

"They loved to take the girls and go hiking," said Mary Hinebauch, a friend from their former church in Montana. "That wasn't an unnatural place for them to be."

"This was a very safe place to be," Hinebauch said. "It's pure evil."

On Oct. 11, 2025, just after midnight in Leland, Mississippi, a small city in Washington County where the population hovers around 3,700, the excitement of homecoming weekend was shattered when a shooting broke out following a football game.

At least six people were killed and at least 19 others wounded.

Three men, identified as Teviyon Powell, 29; William Bryant, 29; and Morgan Lattimore, 25, were charged with capital murder. A fourth suspect, Latoya Powell, 44, was charged with attempted murder.

Investigators said they believe the violence stemmed from a personal dispute, though no final motive has been confirmed.

"This is not who we are as a community," Leland Mayor John Lee said. "Our hearts are broken for these families."

In Anaconda, Montana, a quiet bar in a former mining town with about 9,000 people was interrupted when a man opened fire on Aug. 1, 2025.

Authorities said that Michael Paul Brown, 45, an Army veteran and longtime local resident, entered The Owl Bar around 10:30 a.m. and opened fire. Authorities said Brown lived next door to the bar and was known to the patrons inside.

Four people were killed: Daniel Edwin Baillie, 59; Nancy Lauretta Kelley, 64; David Allen Leach, 70; and Tony Wayne Palm, 74. Kelley was working as the bartender; the others were regular customers.

Residents told Fox News Digital that fear settled over the town as the search dragged on.

"The town is just scared," one bartender said. "Everybody's on edge."

Brown was captured Aug. 8 near a barn about five and a half miles from the bar. Authorities said he was armed.

Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen called the killings "cold-blooded."

In May 2025, a manhunt was launched for the fugitive father of three accused of murdering his three daughters before disappearing into the wilderness. 

The Chelan County Sheriff's Office said Travis Decker, a military veteran and wilderness survivalist, failed to return his three daughters from a court-mandated custody visit in late May 2025. Days later, the bodies of Paityn Decker, 9; Evelyn Decker, 8; and Olivia Decker, 5, were found at a Chelan County campground.

According to police, the girls had been bound with zip ties and suffocated.

"This will bring a close to our case," Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison said after the DNA results were confirmed. "We wanted to show honor to them and let them know we haven't forgotten."

Court records showed Decker's ex-wife had previously petitioned to modify the parenting plan, citing his worsening mental health and unstable living conditions.

Fox News Digital's Peter D'Abrosca, Julia Bonavita, Michael Dorgan and Greg Wehner contributed to this report.

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