Even with their other mistakes, $5 worth of gear would have almost certaintly saved these womens lives:
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,595073455,00.html
Deseret Morning News, Sunday, June 27, 2004
Remains found in Uintas
Bones may be of mother, daughter who disappeared
By Jennifer Dobner and Geoffrey Fattah
Deseret Morning News
A multi-jurisdiction search and rescue training operation turned up a crude shelter, clothing and bone fragments on Saturday that may be the remains of two women who went missing in the Uinta National Forest last September.
The find was made about 11:30 a.m. in the middle fork of Weber Canyon, according to a press release from the Summit County Sheriff's Office. The area is about 2.5 miles northwest of the Crystal Lake trail head where Carole Wetherton, 58, of Panacea, Fla., and her daughter Kim Beverly, 39, of Tucker, Ga., disappeared, Summit County Sheriff's Capt. Alan Siddoway said.
The shelter was about a half mile from any recognizable trail in very steep, rocky and timbered terrain, Siddoway added. It is at least one mile from the area where rescue workers focused their search for the women last fall, he said.
Wetherton and Beverly are the only known people to go missing in that area of the Uintas, Siddoway said, but sheriff's officials would not say if they believe the remains found are those of the women.
"The sheriff's office does not want to speculate that we are dealing with Ms. Wetherton and Ms. Beverly until we are able to get some forensic backup," he said.
Bone fragments found amid the shelter are being examined by the Utah State Medical Examiner's Office to determine if they are of human or animal origin, Siddoway said. That information and a possible positive identification should be available within a few days, he said.
Siddoway said had personally not spoken with Wetherton's husband, Jim Wetherton, on Saturday but would not deny that others from the sheriff's office had been in contact with the woman's family.
The crudely built shelter discovered by rescue teams of both people and dogs was constructed of pine boughs placed in a natural rock shelter. Inside were clothing and other personal items, including a set of car keys.
Last fall, a sport utility vehicle rented by Wetherton and Beverly was found parked at the Crystal Lake trail head parking lot. Maps found inside seemed to indicate the two had planned a day hike in the area.
Relatives of the mother-daughter pair contacted authorities after the two failed to make Sept. 14, 2003, flights home.
In the months following, search and rescue officials scoured the area for any sign of the pair. A forest ranger who saw the women near the trail head on Sept. 8 told the pair that they would need heavier clothing in case the weather turned. Officials believe the two left the area and returned later to start their hike. That afternoon, rain fell and temperatures dropped below freezing. The following night, snow fell.
As hope of finding the two alive dwindled, family members, including Wetherton's husband, traveled to the Uintas to continue searching for any sign of his wife and stepdaughter. Jim Wetherton, according to authorities, vowed to keep searching until the winter's new snow.
Initially, Summit County Sheriff Dave Edmunds had said foul play was ruled out and that it was assumed the two had gotten lost and succumbed to hypothermia.
Those participating in Saturday's exercise included search and rescue teams from Summit, Davis and Weber counties, the Bountiful Jeep posse, Rocky Mountain Rescue Dogs, American Search Dogs and the Department of Public Safety Aero Bureau.