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Ivan Miller, a 22-year-old, stands accused of murdering three women in Utah, allegedly to steal their cars and credit cards.
DENVER — Ivan Miller, the man facing charges for the tragic deaths of three women in Utah, had already caught the attention of Iowa authorities. Court records reveal that Miller was arrested in Iowa about two months earlier, suspected of breaking into a cabin.
In January, officials released Miller without requiring bail for the Iowa charges, with his promise to attend his next court date. However, he failed to appear at his arraignment on Friday because he was detained in southern Colorado. Authorities had tracked him down in one of the vehicles stolen during the Utah incidents.
Miller’s legal representation in Colorado is being handled by the state public defender’s office. Justin Bogan, who leads the office in the judicial district covering Pagosa Springs, declined to provide any comments on Thursday.
As these events unfold, the community in southern Utah, known for its awe-inspiring desert landscapes, is grappling with the shock. Friends and family of the victims are trying to understand what investigators describe as a crime driven by “convenience.”
Meanwhile, out in southern Utah’s starkly beautiful desert country, friends and relatives of the women killed struggled to comprehend what authorities called a crime of “convenience.”
Miller had stolen their cars and credit cards because he needed to get back to Iowa, he told investigators in interviews outlined in court documents.
Two bodies at a trailhead, then a third at a home
The husbands of two victims found their wives dead near a trailhead after they didn’t return from a desert hike. The body of the third victim — a church-going woman who loved yardwork and kept a tidy yard — was found near her home.
There was no sign that Miller had any connection to the three, said Lt. Cameron Roden of the Utah Department of Public Safety.
Miller had been on the move often in recent days if not months. A few days before the killings, Miller hit an elk in the town of Loa.
He sold his pickup truck to the tow company, leaving him without a vehicle. After staying in hotels for a few days, Miller slept in the shed of resident Margaret Oldroyd, 86, in Lyman, Utah, just up the road from Torrey, outside Capitol Reef National Park in southern Utah, he allegedly told investigators.
Oldroyd’s Buick was found Wednesday at a trailhead about 10 miles (16 kilometers) from her house in the rural area of farms and ranches. There, authorities said Miller told them he saw two women get out of a Subaru and killed them before taking their car.
Linda Dewey, 65, and her niece Natalie Graves, 34, were killed and found in a dry creek bed near the trail mostly used by locals. Their husbands called 911 and waved down a ranger.
“Our family is dealing with the shock of the devastating loss of two members of our family who were bonding over the beauty of a hike in one of their favorite places on earth — cherished by them and the community, considered to be a safe sanctuary,” the family of Dewey and Graves said in a statement. “They were murdered. We cannot comprehend why this happened.”
The family described Dewey as a wife, mother, grandmother, daughter and sister who had many extended family members and friends all over the world.
“She was loved deeply and loved her family deeply. She was the heart of our family,” their statement said.
The family described Graves, a wife, daughter and sister, as “joy, sunshine and beauty embodied.”
Elderly victim remembered as sweet, with a tidy yard
Police linked the Buick to its owner, Oldroyd, whose body they found in a cellar under the shed on her property.
Next-door neighbor Randy Jones said he was shocked by the death of “the sweetest woman you’d ever meet.” She kept her flowers and lawn watered and neatly manicured, he said.
Oldroyd used to work at a local grocery store stocking shelves, Jones said. And when Jones helped rid her yard of skunks, she would bring him a cake as a thank you.
“Out here in rural counties, we all take care of each other,” Jones said.
Jones said Oldroyd didn’t leave home much in recent years except to attend religious services and get groceries. Now and then, she would visit him and his horses.
Miller stole Oldroyd’s car after shooting her from behind while she was watching TV, Wayne County prosecutors allege.

A search across the greater Four Corners region
After finding the bodies, police searched the greater Four Corners region for Miller.
He drove through northern Arizona and northwestern New Mexico before they caught up with him in Pagosa Springs, a Colorado tourist town known for hot spring resorts lining the San Juan River.
Miller told investigators he killed the two women after realizing he didn’t like the Buick and took bank cards because he needed money to get back to Iowa, according to court documents.
Miller appeared briefly in court in Colorado for the first time Friday but didn’t speak expect to say and spell his name. His lawyer, public defender Scott Van Zandt, said he would fight his client being sent to Utah, where he could face the death penalty.
Van Zandt said Miller did not want to talk to law enforcement or the media.
Miller had an arraignment scheduled Friday in Iowa on charges including felony second-degree burglary and misdemeanor theft, marijuana possession and gun possession. Court documents in that case say Miller also faced a related case charging him with illegally hunting on a game refuge, but that case was not found in a statewide search of Iowa online court records. According to a court order dated Jan. 13, he was released without bail on a promise to appear on the charges.
Suspect was free after prior arrest at Iowa state park
Miller had been arrested after rangers at a southern Iowa state park entered a cabin on Dec. 31 to get it ready for a reservation later that day.
They found the front door unlocked, food on the counter, a pan with bacon grease in it on the stove, a container with several marijuana joints, and loaded guns including a bolt-action rifle with a bayonet and an AR-10 with a scope and bipod, according to the arrest affidavit.
The person staying there had also brought in a television, Xbox game console and Starlink internet device, suggesting “intent to stay for a long period of time” at Lake Wapello State Park, according to the affidavit by the two park rangers.
The affidavit states that Miller showed up while the rangers were there, knocked softly and soon admitted to breaking into the cabin three days earlier seeking a warm place to stay.
The county attorney’s office prosecuting Miller on his Iowa charges declined Friday to answer any questions on the case, including whether Iowa prosecutors would allow Utah officials to first pursue the more serious charges against Miller. The Associated Press left a voicemail Friday for his public defender in the Iowa case.
This story has been corrected to show that Miller was due in an Iowa court Friday on burglary, theft and other counts and that court documents show he faced a related case accusing him of illegally hunting on game refuge.
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