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Man's body found after 2 1/2 months

by Canda HarbaughWestern News
| December 21, 2010 11:54 AM

A broken water pipe is what finally led

to the discovery of a Libby man’s body in his home on 10th Street

last week about 2-1/2 months after he died.

Phillip Bigelow, 57, died of natural

causes, according to Lincoln County Coroner Steve Schnackenberg.

The time that had elapsed since the body’s discovery, and the fact

that the freezing temperature of the house slowed deterioration,

made it impossible to accurately pinpoint the day Bigelow died,

Schnackenberg said. The best guess, he added, was some time after

Oct. 5 when Bigelow last collected his mail.

His mail began stacking up and he

hadn’t paid his electric bill since mid-September but they weren’t

initially red flags, Libby Chief of Police Jim Smith said, because

snowbirds routinely leave Libby during the winter months without

making proper arrangements. To complicate matters, Bigelow was

known to not pay his water bill for four or five months at a time,

Smith added.

The first sign that something could be

amiss came Nov. 8 when a concerned neighbor reported to police that

Bigelow hadn’t been seen coming in or out of his house for a few

weeks, Smith said.

Though police knocked on his door and

looked in his windows, nothing appeared out-of-the-ordinary, so

they weren’t authorized to enter the home. Police stopped by again

on Nov. 26 and again on Dec. 12.

“We cannot enter a house unless we have

probable cause to believe something is wrong,” Smith said. “… If

nobody answers and we don’t see evidence that anything is amiss,

we’re done.”

Smith pointed out that the department

frequently receives requests for welfare checks. Many times the

subject left for the winter or is staying in the hospital.

“This is a snowbird community, so if

somebody takes off and heads to Arizona in November, then in

December/January their neighbors say, ‘We don’t think they left

anywhere,’” Smith said. “We go and break in and then next spring

when they come home we’re buying them a new door or window.”

Officer Terry Watson began making calls

on Dec. 13 to the utility companies, post office and banks to see

if there was any sign of Bigelow. The man had once owned a house in

Bellingham, Wash., and was known to travel there for work on

occasion, so Watson made contacts there. He also tried to locate

family.

“Everything I did Monday led me back to

his house – that he should be in there,” Watson said. “… We were

discussing with the judge how to file a welfare-type search warrant

but then we found the broken pipe.”

Watson asked the city to check the

man’s water meter and it read 50,000 gallons more than usual. The

discrepancy indicated a broken water main. The only way to shut off

the water was by accessing the inside of the home.

“We had an emergency,” Smith said.

“That gave the police department the authority to go into the

house.”

Police then located Bigelow’s body. In

the basement, they found eight to 10 inches of standing water,

Watson said.

There was no evidence of foul play

inside the house, he added.

In Smith’s experience, it is fairly

common for a body to not be discovered after several weeks.

“It happens every so often. People

don’t have a lot of contact with the outside world,” Smith said.

“They pass away. It might be several weeks or even months before

someone realizes they are missing. That’s what happened in this

case.”

Bigelow had become somewhat of a

recluse, Watson said, after speaking to a neighbor who had known

the man for several years.