Camp Scott was evacuated and was later shut down.
Suspect Gene Leroy Hart (November 27, 1943 – June 4, 1979) had been at large since 1973 after escaping from the Mayes County Jail. He had been convicted of
kidnapping and raping two pregnant women as well as four counts of first-degree
burglary. Raised about a mile from Camp Scott, Hart, a member of the
Cherokee Nation, was arrested within a year at the home of a Cherokee
medicine man. He was represented by Garvin A. Isaacs, a local Oklahoma attorney. He was tried in March 1979. Although the local sheriff pronounced himself "one thousand percent" certain that Hart was guilty, a local jury acquitted him. As a convicted rapist and jail escapee, Hart still had 305 years of his 308-year sentence left to serve in the
Oklahoma State Penitentiary. On June 4, 1979, two years after the murders, Hart collapsed and died of a
heart attack at the age of 35 after about an hour of lifting weights and jogging in the prison exercise yard.
Civil suit Two of the families later sued the
Magic Empire Council and its insurer for million (equivalent to $million in ), alleging negligence. The civil trial included discussion of the threatening note and the fact that tent #7 was from the counselors' tent. In 1985, by a 9–3 vote, jurors decided in favor of Magic Empire. In 2008, authorities conducted new DNA testing on stains found on a pillowcase, the results of which proved inconclusive because the samples were "too deteriorated to obtain a DNA profile". In 2017, (equivalent to $ in ) in donations were raised by the sheriff in order to do new DNA tests using the latest advances in testing. In 2022, authorities made public that DNA evidence strongly suggests Hart's involvement. Sheriff Mike Reed of Mayes County said, "Unless something new comes up, something brought to light we are not aware of, I am convinced where I'm sitting of Hart's guilt and involvement in this case." Reed said the results of the DNA tests have been known since 2019, but did not go public with the findings until asked to do so by the victims' families. == Legacy ==