Investigators have released chilling new details, including what appears to be CCTV or trail camera footage of Anthony Edward Pollio in the moments leading up to his deadly encounter with a grizzly bear in Glacier National Park. In the approximately 22-second recording, the last clear sound captured is something large moving quickly through the trees — a rustle of branches, a heavy snap, and then abrupt motion that changes everything.

Dad Recalls Final Voicemail Son Left Mid-Hike Before Apparent Bear Attack  Death

The footage, described by sources close to the investigation as grainy but devastating, shows the 33-year-old Florida man walking along a forested section of the Mount Brown Trail. He appears calm and focused, possibly catching his breath after the steep climb. He is heard leaving what investigators now refer to as the “voice-off” — the final voicemail to his father. Moments later, the audio picks up the unmistakable sound of rapid movement in the underbrush. Then the recording ends in chaos.

This new evidence paints the most complete — and most terrifying — picture yet of the final minutes of Anthony Pollio’s life.

The Final Voicemail: “I Love You, Dad”

According to his father, Arthur Pollio, Anthony’s last message was filled with excitement and love. Sounding out of breath from the hike, he said: “Dad, I’m hiking up a mountain. It’s wild out here.” He ended with the simple, heartfelt words: “I love you, dad.” That voicemail, left while he was still moving along the trail, has become the emotional centerpiece of the tragedy.

The newly referenced footage appears to capture him in the act of leaving or immediately after leaving that message. For the first several seconds, the scene is almost peaceful: a lone hiker on a remote mountain path as daylight begins to fade. Then the audio element changes the entire context. The sound of “something moving quickly through the trees” suggests a sudden, powerful presence — consistent with expert descriptions of how grizzlies can approach with surprising speed in dense timber before a defensive charge.

Inside the 22-Second Recording

Sources familiar with the footage describe it as follows:

Man from South Florida dies in bear attack

Seconds 0–8: Pollio walking steadily on the trail, possibly checking his phone or speaking into it.
Seconds 9–15: He pauses briefly, looks toward the dense treeline to his right. The “voice-off” portion aligns with the known voicemail content.
Seconds 16–22: A distinct rustling escalates into heavy crashing through branches. The camera captures blurred motion consistent with a large animal breaking cover at close range. The hiker’s posture shifts instantly to alarm before the clip ends.

Park officials have not released the footage publicly, citing the ongoing investigation and respect for the family. However, limited descriptions and stills have circulated among law enforcement, search teams, and select media, intensifying public interest. The presence of this recording — whether from a research station camera, private trail cam, or park infrastructure — provides critical forensic context to what was previously known only through physical evidence.

The Scene on the Ground

Pollio’s remains were found on May 6, roughly 2.5 miles up the Mount Brown Trail, about 50 feet (15 meters) off the path in thick, downed timber. His backpack and personal items were relatively intact nearby. The strong odor of bear spray still lingered days later, confirming that the experienced hunter had time to react and deploy his primary defense. Injuries were consistent with a grizzly bear encounter.

The footage appears to corroborate the theory of a sudden defensive attack rather than a prolonged pursuit. Grizzlies in Glacier can move at speeds up to 35 mph in short bursts. In heavy cover with poor sight lines, a hiker has mere seconds to register the threat.

Why This Footage Matters

The release of these details — even in limited form — answers some questions while raising others. It confirms the rapid timeline: one moment a man is sharing love and excitement with his father; the next, survival instincts take over against an apex predator.

Bear experts note that most fatal or injurious grizzly encounters in the Lower 48 are surprise/defensive in nature. A female with cubs or a bear near a food cache is particularly dangerous. The Mount Brown Trail’s lower and mid-sections feature exactly the kind of dense forest where such encounters are most likely.

The “voice-off” timing is especially poignant. Anthony was not panicked in his final message to his father. He was present, joyful, and connected — right up until the moment everything changed.

Anthony Pollio: The Man Behind the Story

Those who knew him describe a fearless, well-rounded individual. A University of Central Florida graduate, Catholic deacon in Sebring, Florida, and outdoor equipment specialist, Pollio lived a life that bridged faith, service, and adventure. His father called him “a warrior… a gladiator” who had “tons of experience” in the outdoors as a hunter and hiker.

He was on a two-week road trip through the West when he chose to hike solo in Glacier after his friend continued traveling. The Mount Brown Fire Lookout — with its promise of panoramic sunset views — was a classic bucket-list objective for someone like Anthony.

The Broader Context of Risk in Glacier

This incident marks the first fatal bear attack in Glacier National Park since 1998. While rare, such events highlight the inherent dangers of wilderness recreation. The park is part of a recovering grizzly ecosystem, and human-bear overlap continues to increase as both populations grow.

Officials had posted bear danger signs in the area. Standard recommendations include traveling in groups, making noise, carrying bear spray, and maintaining heightened awareness during low-light periods. Pollio was equipped with spray and used it, but the surprise element in dense timber left little margin for error.

Lessons Etched in Tragedy

The 22-second recording serves as a haunting case study in preparedness. Key takeaways echoed by rangers and biologists include:

Solo travel in prime grizzly habitat significantly elevates risk.
Audio cues (rustling, snapping branches) can provide the only warning.
Bear spray is effective but requires immediate and accurate deployment under extreme stress.
Sharing real-time location and plans with loved ones (as Anthony did via voicemail) remains vital.

The footage also humanizes the statistic. It is not just a bear attack report — it is a father’s final loving words, followed by the sudden violence of the wild.

Family Grief and Public Fascination

For Arthur Pollio and the rest of the family, every new detail reopens the wound. Hearing descriptions of the footage — the voice, the pause, the crashing through trees — must be excruciating. Yet they have spoken publicly with courage, hoping their son’s story promotes better safety rather than fear.

Online, the incident has sparked intense discussion. Some focus on conspiracy elements or unverified “leaks,” while most express condolences and renewed commitment to responsible hiking. The combination of a final loving voicemail and dramatic audio evidence has made this case particularly resonant.

A Lasting Reminder

Anthony Edward Pollio went into the mountains seeking beauty and challenge. He left a voice message filled with love — and then everything changed in the space of seconds. The sound of something large moving fast through the trees stands as nature’s stark warning: respect is mandatory, complacency can be fatal.

As the full investigation concludes, authorities will likely provide more clarity on the exact circumstances, any video evidence, and updated safety protocols for the Mount Brown Trail and similar routes. For now, the 22-second window offers the clearest view yet into a tragedy that should never have happened — but one that reminds every outdoor enthusiast of the thin line between wonder and peril.

Anthony lived boldly, loved deeply, and fought hard in his final moments. His last words — “I love you, dad” — echo as both farewell and instruction: cherish connections, prepare thoroughly, and approach the wild with humility.

The mountains remain majestic. But as this footage painfully illustrates, they also demand our fullest attention and respect.