When Steven Haataja came to this remote corner of Nebraska, where cowboy
hats are still worn for work and rodeo trophies greet visitors to the local
college, it was supposed to be a new beginning for the mathematician who had
just earned his doctorate.
CNN.com POSTED: 10:22
a.m. EDT, May 8, 2007
CHADRON, Nebraska (AP) -- Just seven months
later, in March, the man colleagues say had astounding intelligence was found
burned to death in fire-scarred hills just south of the small school where he
taught.
According to a source close to the investigation, Haataja was
burned and bound, though it's not clear how. He died of smoke and soot
inhalation, along with "thermal injuries," authorities said last
month.
"When you see something like that, somebody in that kind of
condition, you just hope they catch whoever did it," Mike Bloom, one of two
ranchers who found the body, said in March.
Haataja, with his large
frame and fedora hat, was more visible than most on Chadron's wide, Western
streets for a simple reason: he didn't own a running car and walked everywhere
from his downtown apartment, including to the college that's a mile
away.
He disappeared from this city of 5,600 in December. Police saw
no signs he planned on leaving and have acknowledged they did little to search
for the professor.
"We could've searched these remote areas for days
and days and days, but where do you start?" said acting Chadron Police Chief
Margaret Keiper.
After months of near-silence about the case and
criticism that authorities have been slow-footed to investigate, more
information is supposed to be released Tuesday at a news
conference.
'Some people are freaked out'
Residents say it
is long overdue. Without any answers, the intensity of the speculation over his
death has "gotten crazy," said Kit Reeves, who works across the street from
where the professor lived.
"Some people are freaked out," Reeves
said. "Was he just randomly picked on or was there a reason?"
In the
fervor, former city councilman Morgan Muller and others said they worried that
Haataja was the victim of a hate crime. Kelen Kahrs said he and other students
wondered whether their professor was singled out because of his effeminate
mannerisms.
Haataja's best friend, Tim Sorenson, said he was not gay,
and police wouldn't say whether they believe it was a hate
crime.
Others suggest that Haataja, who had been hospitalized early
last year for depression, committed suicide.
But it would have been
difficult for Haataja, 46, to make the journey himself to the rough hills where
his body was found.
He suffered a broken hip in March 2005 while ice
skating and the accident made the already cautious Haataja even more careful,
Sorenson said. He avoided walking on bumpy sidewalks and stepping over objects
more than a couple feet high.
"This is the most mysterious thing
that's ever happened here," said Con Marshall, a lifelong area resident who has
worked at Chadron State College for 38 years.
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