Investigators found a journal left by ambush suspect Eric Frein that describes how he opened fire on two state troopers outside a rural police barracks — watching one of his victims fall "still and quiet" — and then made his escape, authorities said Wednesday.
Frein wrote how he "got a shot around 11 p.m. and took it. He dropped. I was surprised at how quick," according to Pennsylvania State Police Lt. Col. George Bivens, who read from the multipage journal that authorities said they found last week at a campsite used by Frein.
The journal describes how Frein fled in a Jeep, ran it into a swamp and took off on foot — a botched getaway Frein termed a "disaster," said Bivens.
The waterlogged document was found Sept. 29, when authorities discovered a campsite at which they also found explosives, ammunition, food, water and clothing. Authorities are analyzing it, but Bivens said he is convinced it was written by Frein, who is charged in the deadly attack that killed one trooper and seriously injured a second.
"I will tell you, after reading this cold-blooded and absolutely chilling account, I can only describe Eric Frein's actions as pure evil," he said.
Hundreds of law enforcement officials have been looking for Frein — described by authorities as a 31-year-old survivalist and expert marksman with a grudge against law enforcement — in the woods around his parents' home in Canadensis, in the Pocono Mountains.
Officers believe they have spotted Frein in the forest, but the distance and rugged terrain allowed him to slip away.
The most recent sighting came Tuesday afternoon, when an officer thought he had a brief glimpse of Frein from about 200 yards away, Bivens said. That was the fourth sighting by police or the community since Friday, he said.