On November 24, 2009, 26-year-old John Edward Jones became stuck upside down in a narrow crevice while exploring the cave. After around 27 hours of being stuck, Jones died at 11:56pm on November 25. Jones and three others had left their group of family and friends in search of "The Birth Canal", a tight but navigable passageway with a turnaround at the end. Jones entered an unmapped passageway near an area referred to as "Ed’s Push", which he wrongly believed to be the Canal, and found himself at a dead end, with nowhere to go besides a narrow vertical downward fissure. Believing this to be the turnaround, he entered head-first, then became stuck wedged upside-down. The fissure measured 10 by 18 inches (25 by 46 cm) and was located 400 feet (120 m) from the entrance of the cave. A large team of rescue workers came to his assistance. The workers set up a sophisticated rope-and-pulley system in an attempt to extricate him, but the system failed when put under strain, plunging Jones back into the hole. Jones ultimately suffered
cardiac arrest and died due to the strain placed upon his body over many hours by his inverted, compressed position. After rescuers concluded that it would be too dangerous to attempt to retrieve his body, the landowner and Jones's family came to an agreement that the cave would be sealed, with the cave as his final resting place, and as a memorial to Jones. Explosives were used to collapse the ceiling in the Ed's Push passageway of the cave close to where Jones's body was. All entry points to the cave were permanently sealed by filling them with concrete, making the cave system inaccessible. Some cavers opposed the cave's closure.
Facebook community groups petitioned to save the cave but failed. Although cavers had cut their way through a gated entrance to the property prior to the closure of the cave, they were apprehended by security officials before they could reach it and charged with trespassing entry. A film about the incident titled
The Last Descent was released on September 16, 2016. In 2025, a detailed recreation of the Nutty Putty cave was added to the
virtual reality video game,
Cave Crave, allowing gamers to explore the cave for themselves. The game features detailed narration from Brandon Kowallis, an experienced caver who was directly involved in the rescue attempt of Jones. In May 2026, previously unseen footage from the 2009 incident and rescue attempt was obtained by and released to the public by EWU Unsolved. ==See also==