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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Police search for Utah man after 3 women found dead in Idaho

By Rebecca Boone Associated Press

BOISE, Idaho (AP) – Police say a grisly scene uncovered at a southwestern Idaho farmhouse earlier this week has prompted a nationwide search for the property owner, a man they are describing as “armed and dangerous.”

The badly decomposed bodies of three unidentified women who had been shot to death were found hidden in a shed outside Gerald Michael “Mike” Bullinger’s home on Monday. Several dead pets were also found at the home, but Bullinger was gone. He’s now been named a person of interest in the case, and charged with failing to report the deaths to authorities.

“We would consider him armed and dangerous at this time,” Canyon County Chief Deputy Marv Dashiell said Wednesday morning. “If someone does come into contact with him or observe him, we request that they contact local law enforcement immediately.”

Bullinger, a 60-year-old pilot, had just purchased the home last month with his wife, 57-year-old Cheryl Baker. The couple was in the process of moving to Idaho from Utah when one of Bullinger’s relatives called police to ask for a welfare check, saying the family hadn’t been heard from for a few days.

The sheriff’s deputy responding to the home noticed signs that something was amiss and so began looking around the tiny farmhouse and wooded lot, Dashiell said. That’s when the deputy discovered a gruesome scene: A shed on the property held three badly decomposed bodies, each laying side-by-side and hidden under some sort of covering. Several dead birds and dogs – likely family pets – were also found on the property, and other living animals including a snake, rat and some rabbits were removed during the subsequent investigation.

At first, investigators couldn’t determine the gender of the bodies or what killed them, but autopsies completed Tuesday revealed that the three women had each been shot once. The women ranged in age from mid-teens to late 50s, and their ages and statures matched the description of people thought to have been living at the home. Dashiell said investigators are working with family members to try to positively identify the bodies using DNA or other forensics.

The women had been dead for one to two weeks before their remains were found, Dashiell said.

Police are actively seeking Bullinger, Dashiell said, and believe he may be driving a white 2007 Ford Focus with Utah license plates numbered 129UMP. He is about 6 feet, 1 inch tall and weighs an estimated 240 pounds, with gray hair and brown eyes.

Baker’s brother, Byron Baker, told the Idaho Statesman newspaper that the couple was still in the process of moving from Utah to their new home in Caldwell when family members became concerned because they hadn’t heard from them. Byron Baker said he thought the couple lived alone, and was unsure who anyone else at the home might be.

“I just don’t know what to believe,” he told the Idaho Statesman on Tuesday. “There are four people involved here. Three bodies and someone who covered the bodies.”

He also described a strange text his sister had sent to a close friend in Utah around June 11, which read: “Take care of my dogs. I don’t know if I’m coming back.”

Cheryl Baker had just retired from her job as an art teacher at GreenWood Charter School in Harrisville, Utah, and Bullinger was a pilot with Classic Aviations Service in Utah before taking on contract work in Idaho.

Neighbors of the Caldwell home reported hearing a gunshot or other noises about 10 days ago, but gunshots aren’t uncommon in the rural area, where many avid hunters and target shooters live.

One neighbor, Cindy Morrison, said she heard a loud scream early one morning sometime around June 6 to June 10, but wasn’t sure at the time whether it was an animal or a woman who made the noise. She didn’t hear anything else, and opted not to call police.