Following the 1984 biathlon season, Swenson took a summer job at a
guest ranch near
Big Sky, Montana, where she could train daily. On July 15, 1984, while on a training run in the
Ulerys Lakes area, she was
abducted by
survivalist Don Nichols and his son Dan, with the aim of forcing Swenson into becoming Dan's bride. By the following morning, over twenty searchers were combing the mountains. Swenson's friend Alan Goldstein and a ranch worker, Jim Schwalbe, paired up during the search and stumbled onto the Nicholses' camp. Because the Nicholses had threatened to shoot any rescuers, Swenson shouted to Goldstein and Schwalbe in an attempt to warn them away. She later recounted that Don ordered Dan to "shut me up." The younger Nichols looked directly at Swenson and shot her. "It wasn't an accident," she later said in 2019, Swenson remained in the clearing, in pain so intense it prevented her from moving, for four hours before she was rescued. Swenson later attributed her survival to the breath control skills she developed as a biathlete.
Kidnappers' fate Don and Dan Nichols were captured in December 1984. They were tried separately in
Virginia City, Montana,
prosecuted by
Marc Racicot, then a staff attorney for the
Montana Attorney General. Don was released from prison on August 23, 2017. He died on June 17, 2023.
Media coverage Swenson and her family were not pleased by some of the media coverage of her ordeal, feeling it glamorized her abductors as mythical "
mountain men" and stereotyped her, a champion athlete, as a "proper
Belle." A
television movie titled
The Abduction of Kari Swenson, produced by
NBC, aired on March 8, 1987. It starred
Tracy Pollan in the leading role as Kari Swenson. Swenson contributed as a technical advisor during production and also filmed her own ski sequences. The
A&E documentary series
American Justice detailed the story in 1995, reenacting Swenson's abduction and the Nichols’ subsequent trial. Her story was also featured on the
Investigation Discovery series
Your Worst Nightmare, premiering on February 11, 2017. In 2019 her story was the focus of an
ESPN 30 for 30 podcast titled "Out of the Woods." The 30 for 30 podcast episode was also featured in the
Criminal episode #128, titled "Deep Breath". == Later life ==