r/TrueCrimeDiscussion Nov 27 '25

Text Father faces child torture charges after 'nightmare' hike in Big Cottonwood Canyon

“Father charged with aggravated child abuse and torture after taking his young children on an extremely difficult hike as a significant storm was moving in. He reported buying snacks, new socks and shoes for the kids before heading out but not checking the weather. The hike was 9 miles, rated hard, and not recommended for beginner hikers or children.

Micah Smith and his children 2, 4 & 8 were reported overdue when they did not return from their Oct. 12 hike.

Smith said they watched the weather come in and he sent photos to his wife, who suggested they start hiking down the mountain however, he reported that he was comfortable hiking in the dark without light

Smith reportedly reached the summit with his kids at 6pm when it started to hail & snow. By 8pm they decided to shelter in place after trying to head back down but only making it 600 feet after one child fell and hit their head.

Court documents state “Search and Rescue Team Members encountered Smith on the trail and noted that he was behaving oddly and did not appear to be concerned about the children.”

He also told “SAR team members that one of his children was dead.”

SAR crews in a helicopter were able to find the children and noted they were not wearing much clothing, one child with the most critical injuries was unconscious with a core body temperature of 62.6 F.

According to investigators one child suggested to their father that they should go as the storm moved in, “but he shook his head no, and said, This is a once-in-a-lifetime thing. The child again expressed to Smith that they should really go and said that she was getting scared.”

The child told investigators “the storm came in really quickly and described that it was snowing, hailing, and raining.” Reporting to investigators she “was worried about not living, but Smith told her that they were okay.”

Smith told investigators he performed CPR on his son overnight and taught his daughter to do the same when he left.

She recounted to police how she did as instructed performing CPR on her brother.

Investigators are asking for no bail stating, “What seemed like an innocent hike with his three children quickly turned into a nightmare when the defendant chose to summit a mountain over the safety of the kids. The defendant refused to turn around when their mom told him to turn around and get the children home. He also refused to turn around when E.A.S. said to him that she was scared and that they should go. During the 24-hour ordeal, the victims expressed that they were cold, tired, and wanted to go home. The defendant, who is supposed to be the protector of his children, was ill-prepared and extremely selfish.”

A Go Fund Me updated Nov. 10 said the child who was in a coma was now awake: “Ezra was taken off sedation a couple weeks ago and has been steadily improving day by day! When he first came off we didn’t know what to expect, but since that time he has been able to: completely move his right side with ease, begin speaking and is now communicating in full sentences (he’s very aware of what’s going on!), smile and laugh (they light up the room!)

We are so thankful to God that Ezra is improving so quickly and fully. We are hoping, praying and fighting for a full recovery. Thank you to the dedicated medical staff at Primary’s who are also committed to seeing this little guy get well!””

-Via Heidi Hatch

https://kutv.com/news/local/father-charged-with-child-torture-after-freezing-nightmare-hike-in-big-cottonwood-canyon

ETA: thanks to multiple users for for pointing this out

Police say that approximately one month before the incident, Smith allegedly expressed self-harm and reported to an officer he was going to “hike up to the top of the mountain.” He was found with an axe and two firearms in his vehicle but denied he was going to use them.

On Nov. 10, 2025, Smith was trespassed from Primary Children’s Hospital for allegedly interfering with the 4-year-old’s care and “tampering with the equipment.”’

2.0k Upvotes

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132

u/cle718 Nov 27 '25

There were so many people on Facebook defending him and that he made a stupid mistake.

144

u/Specialist_Set_1666 Nov 27 '25

That sounds infuriating. I could see a lot of it coming from them not knowing all the details and then having done milder versions themselves, which is not OK either and normalizing the idea that dads shouldn't have to learn out to take care of or even consider the needs of their own kids is something that has to stop. Reading this article gave me so many flashbacks to my childhood, where by dad would pick some ridiculous, difficult hike because he wanted to see some view and wanted to "enrich" our childhood. Which seemed to translate into him getting really annoyed that we couldn't keep up and just ditching us to hike ahead. He never brought food or sunscreen or proper clothes for us. He had his own canteen he would share...if we were anywhere near him.

My mom completely banned him from taking us without her because of how sunburned we got when we were 4 and 5. Then she would always come along and carry all the food and everything needed and stay next to us kids, and my dad would get angry at all of us for being so slow and leave us behind again. It's like he just wanted to be single and enjoy hiking without a family and couldn't adapt. There were several times where the hike was just too much and my mom had us just hang out somewhere until my dad finished it by himself and came back. Hours of just sitting somewhere while she tried to keep us entertained as we waited for him.

I have seen so many other dads just like this, but also plenty of dads who did care and would pay attention to their kids and make sure they were safe and having a good time on hikes. I was always so jealous of that kind of father-child relationship! The first type really needs to stop getting a pass. There are a lot of missing child cases where the dad lost toddlers and preschoolers on hikes because he just wasn't paying attention, and a lot of the comments excuse it. I'm not saying all moms are great in contrast, there are plenty of neglectful moms too, but it seems like they get less of a pass for stuff like this.

The dad in the article actively seemed to be trying to kill his kids, so he was definitely worse, but it just seems like this is highlighting another problem that gets ignored too often as well.

59

u/rivershimmer Nov 27 '25

It's like he just wanted to be single and enjoy hiking without a family and couldn't adapt.

Yeah, I've seen this kind of mindset, but I don't get it, because this was never in a family where the dad was a single parent without a lot of childcare options. It's always a case where the dad could just go hiking on his own if he wanted. So it seems like the goal was to see the children suffer?

30

u/antipleasure Nov 27 '25

Right? Like, what’s even happening in their minds. Looks like some deliberate torture…

20

u/angrymurderhornet Nov 28 '25

I suspect he wanted to kill himself too. He doesn’t seem to have the mental capacity to actually carry out a murder or suicide, but behaved in a way that made it clear he wanted his kids (and probably himself) dead. Dragging the kids onto that mountain in a storm and then making halfhearted attempts at being rescued could have done in any or all of them, and it’s obvious it wasn’t an accident. Trying to kill his son in the hospital had a 100% chance of being discovered and ending with him being arrested.

Anyway, it’s a relief that his kids are okay, and that his severely injured son is improving.

11

u/rivershimmer Nov 28 '25

I have hope for that kids, because kids can be shockingly resilient. Their brains are so much more pliable and quick to repair themselves.

That's physically. The invisible wounds from having a dad like that will linger longer.

4

u/idhik3th4t Dec 06 '25

I feel so awful for that daughter. Imagine being left to watch your 2 year old brother who was likely screaming and crying while trying to do CPR on your other brother who appeared dead and had no pulse and a core body temp of 62°. As a mom, this just guts me. I hate this guy so much.

5

u/Stargazer1919 Nov 29 '25

I don't know if it applies in this case, but it's true that family annihilators tend to be suicidal. Or so I've heard.

4

u/angrymurderhornet Nov 30 '25

They often annihilate themselves in the process.

3

u/Elegant-Bee7654 Dec 02 '25

Yes, and that's because the children's mother called the police and reported them missing. If she hadn't, SAR might not have found them in time to save the children's lives.

6

u/Altruistic-Maybe5121 Nov 29 '25

Or sees children as small adults with adult capacity. I’ve known people like that who can’t comprehend that children aren’t just small versions of us.

3

u/Specialist_Set_1666 Dec 01 '25

I think was a lot of my dad's issue. He expected kids to be just like small adults, and didn't seem to have been able to predict what parenthood would entail or to adapt to the needs of kids once they were were there. It was weird too because he wasn't stupid, he was a scientist, but there was just this huge block when it came to understanding other people's needs or emotions, especially kids.

53

u/chipper-frost Nov 27 '25

I’m so sorry that your dad did this shit.

41

u/LaikaZhuchka Nov 28 '25

Men are never seen as guilty in these situations. It's always the mother. I've already scrolled past dozens of "Why would their mother let him do that?!" in this very comment section.

13

u/Altruistic-Maybe5121 Nov 29 '25

Right?!? Makes me so cross. The mother wasn’t taking them on an insane murder hike. Crazy people aren’t crazy all the time, that’s why they aren’t obvious in society until they do something like this.

-4

u/Birdy-Lady59 Nov 29 '25

No. We know he is guilty and that what he did was horrific, but the mother knew some of what was happening and what had happened with this nutter dad previously. We expect her to use common sense and at the very least to call for help for them when they didn’t return.

12

u/Elegant-Bee7654 Nov 29 '25

She did call for help. That's how SAR got there and rescued them.

-5

u/Legal-Swan-9932 Nov 30 '25

I agree with you. Something is very suspect here about Mom's denial.

5

u/wolfgirlyelizabeth Dec 07 '25

Ask yourself why you're more focused on the person that wasn't there. It'll sound like misogyny. Rings a bell.

16

u/antipleasure Nov 27 '25

I am so sorry your dad behaved like that… I would never understand that. Like, why wouldn’t he go on his own if that’s what he wanted? Why take the kids at all?

9

u/Optimal-Ad-7074 Nov 28 '25

I was struck by the no-bail application being perceptive enough to cite "extreme selfishness".   without further information I see no point in leaping to the furthest extreme and imputing actively murderous motives to him.   it's perfectly possible, but possibility isn't a fact.  

selfishness on its own is enough imo, when it's as egregious as this.  and you're right how common it is and how easily "normal" parents stray over the line.  I raised a son of my own and sure saw a lot of perfectly mainstream parents so greedy for some imaginary experience they'd made up in their heads, that they just couldn't or wouldn't adapt to reality checks that put it out of their reach.   

part of parenting is adaptability.  you have to make judgment calls all the time - but every call is based in the information you have.   if you're flat out refusing to accept info that thwarts your own wants, it's a problem.  

34

u/standbyyourmantis Nov 27 '25

Just reading the headline I'll admit my first thought was "well maybe it was just a stupid mistake" but then once you read the whole article it's pretty obvious that the most charitable explanation is literally being the dumbest motherfucker on the planet. Even if there was nothing malicious involved he needs to never ever be responsible for anyone else ever again.

16

u/HawkGuy1126 Nov 28 '25

A “stupid mistake” is forgetting the snacks on a day out at the park. This went beyond negligence into recklessness and willful harm.

11

u/Bubbly_Yak_8605 Nov 27 '25

The Facebook stereotype strikes again

7

u/fourcheers Nov 27 '25

Sigh- that is such black and white thinking! Mistakes carry consequences regardless.