LOCATED DECEASED
Now his family fights for justice
Christopher Mauk, better known by friends and family as Fid, disappeared without a trace on July 02,2022. On November 05, 2023 human remains that were believed and later confirmed to be Fid were located just off the trail of a well-known walking and biking area in Laramie Wyoming called the Green Belt. Upon the discovery of his remains, family and our team began immediately asking questions. We do not feel that Fid's body was in that location the whole time!!
After a tragic 4th of July accident, Fid had lost a leg and depended on crutches for mobility. Due to the location of his body, it would have been extremely tough for him to get down there on his own. It would have also been extremely tough for Fid to be able to walk from his residence to the area he was found in.
Now the family is fighting for answers and a full investigation to be completed as a homicide case.
Laramie Police Confirm Human Remains Belong to Christopher Dale Mauk
Dental records determine identity, but no cause of death has been established.
- Published In: Other News & Features
- Last Updated: Nov 28, 2023
The human remains found in Laramie in early November were identified as belonging to Christopher Dale Mauk, 40, who had been missing since July 2022. (Courtesy photo from the Mauk family)
By Jennifer Kocher
Special to the Wyoming Truth
The human remains discovered in Laramie in early November have been positively identified as Christopher Dale Mauk, who had been missing for more than a year.
The Laramie Police Department announced Monday that dental records determined the remains belong to Mauk, according to Ryan Thompson, a support services lieutenant. A cause of death has yet to be confirmed pending the coroner’s report, Thompson said in an email to the Wyoming Truth.
A dog walker found skeletal remains on Nov. 5, along the Greenbelt near W. Curtis Street. At the time of the discovery, police notified Mauk’s father, Jerry, that the remains were likely those of his son.
For Jerry and the family, the discovery is one step closer to solving the mystery of what happened to 40-year-old Mauk after he disappeared, though it brings them little relief.
“There’s a lot of heartache, you know,” Jerry said on Tuesday. “I was holding out hope that something else would have happened.”
Now, Jerry is eager to learn the manner of his son’s death and whether or not anyone is responsible. The investigation remains ongoing, according to Thompson.
Mauk was reported missing in July 2022 after last being spotted at Lee’s Mobile Home Park, where he lived with his girlfriend, 42-year-old Nikki Gallegos. Mauk left their residence early in the morning of July 2 while she was sleeping, Gallegos said. Mauk left behind his wallet, eyeglasses and crutches that he needed to walk after losing his bottom left leg in a fireworks accident in 2018.
Mauk’s family will host a public celebration of his life on Saturday, Dec. 2 at 1 p.m. at the Eagles Club in Laramie.
Body Found in Laramie Sunday Likely That of Christopher Mauk, Father Says
Christopher Mauk has been missing since July 2022, family seeks answers
- Published In: Criminal Justice
- Last Updated: Nov 06, 2023
The remains of a body found in Laramie over the weekend have been identified as missing Laramie man, Christopher “Fid” Mauk, according to his father, Jerry Mauk. (Courtesy photo from the Mauk family)
By Jennifer Kocher
Special to the Wyoming Truth
This story has been updated with new information on November 6, 2023 as of 2:45 p.m. MT.
The father of the missing Laramie man, Christopher “Fid” Mauk, said the remains of the body found in Laramie on Sunday were likely those of his son.
Though the Laramie Police Department has not yet publicly identified the remains, Mauk’s father, Jerry Mauk, said he received a call from a Laramie police detective around 6 p.m. Sunday, informing him that the body found in Laramie River Greenbelt Park by a dog walker on Nov. 5 was Christopher.
In a subsequent call with the detective Monday morning, the detective revised that information, saying it was likely Christopher but more testing needed to be done, and those details couldn’t be shared with the family, Mauk told the Wyoming Truth.
According to a statement by Steven Morgan, who oversees the records and communications division of the Laramie Police Department, the remains have not been positively identified.
“There are multiple ways to accomplish identification, all of which take some time,” Morgan said in an email to the Wyoming Truth. “We’re waiting for results and corroboration of the evidence.”
Jerry Mauk wasn’t sure of the exact location of where the body was found, but said family members who saw the police on scene told him that it was within about a six-block walk from Lee’s Mobile Home Park on N. Cedar Street, where Mauk lived with his girlfriend, 42-year-old Nikki Gallegos.
Mauk, 40, has been missing since July 2, 2022, according to Gallegos. In a previous interview with the Wyoming Truth, she said Mauk was crying when he woke her up at 5:30 a.m. that morning. He said he had secrets and wanted to talk as soon as he got out of the shower. Gallegos said she fell asleep before they had that conversation and never saw or heard from him again.
Mauk, who was missing the lower half of his left leg following a fireworks accident in 2018, did not have a prosthetic leg and relied on crutches that he left at home, along with his wallet, eyeglasses and medications, Gallegos said.
Mauk’s father called the news a “mixed blessing” as the family now waits details from police. At present, there are no funeral or memorial plans in the works, he said.
This story will be updated as more information becomes available.
Over a Year Later, the Question Remains: What Happened to Chris Mauk?
Gillette volunteer investigators hit the ground to look for missing Laramie man
- Published In: Other News & Features
- Last Updated: Aug 16, 2023
Christopher “Fid” Mauk has been missing since July 2, 2022, and his case is being actively investigated by the Laramie Police Department.
(Courtesy photo from We Help the Missing)
By Jennifer Kocher
Special to the Wyoming Truth
LARAMIE, Wyo.—The thing about a missing person is that anything is possible. In the absence of concrete facts and clues, investigators are forced to rely on possible sightings, rumors and talk on the street. And in Laramie, people like to talk.
This is what Stacy Koester and Ashley Means were banking on as they stopped at a gas station in Laramie on Saturday morning after driving 3.5 hours from Gillette. As volunteer private investigators for the national nonprofit We Help the Missing (WHTM), they have been called in by the organization to investigate the mysterious disappearance of 40-year-old Christopher “Fid” Mauk.
“Let’s see what we can find out,” Koester said to Means, as the two exited her black Audi.
Already, the pair have collected an earful of stories based on earlier phone calls with locals and online research. They came to Laramie to meet some of those sources and scout for possible search areas.
Nikki Gallegos, 42, wears the Christopher Mauk missing person T-shirt handmade by Stacy Koester, a volunteer private investigator with the national nonprofit We Help the Missing.
(Courtesy photo from Ashley Means)
Here’s what they know so far: Mauk was last seen on July 2, 2022, at the trailer he shared with his girlfriend, 42-year-old Nikki Gallegos, in Sunny Meadows Village off North McCue Street. According to Gallegos, Mauk woke her up at 5:30 a.m. that day. He cried as he said that he had secrets and wanted to talk as soon as he got out of the shower.
The couple never had that conversation, however, because Gallegos said she fell asleep. When she woke up, Mauk was gone. A few of his friends reportedly saw Mauk in the following 36 hours, after which he was never seen or heard from again.
Gallegos noted Mauk couldn’t have gone far on his own: he only has one leg. Mauk lost the lower half of his left leg in a fireworks accident in 2018. Without a prosthetic, he relied on crutches that he left in the trailer. He also left his wallet, eyeglasses and medications, though he did take his cell phone.
In the immediate months following his departure, two people claimed to have seen Mauk: one at a car show in Laramie and another in Cheyenne, according to Gallegos. Neither sighting was verified.
The Laramie Police Department has no new information to share about the case.
“We are still actively working on his disappearance and continue to work any leads or tips that we receive,” said Ryan Thompson, support services lieutenant.
Rumors and innuendo
Christopher Mauk and Nikki Gallegos have dated off and on since they were teens. Most recently, they were together for three months before Mauk mysteriously disappeared in 2022. (Courtesy photo from Nikki Gallegos)
Sorting out truths from rumors is the challenge for Koester and Means. Though stories vary, the one thing that everyone they speak to can agree on is that Mauk was using methamphetamines. This was confirmed by Gallegos, who told Koester that both she and Mauk struggled with addiction.
To what extent his drug use factored into Mauk’s disappearance depends on who is doing the talking.
At their first stop at a truck stop off I-80, Koester and Means got lucky. A cashier, who said she was well acquainted with Mauk, was eager to talk. The woman, who asked to remain anonymous out of fear for her safety, believes Mauk was murdered by an affiliate in the drug world, which Koester and Means mentally cataloged.
This tip, like all the others, will be shared with the Laramie police detective assigned to Mauk’s case. As private investigators, Koester and Means’ role is limited to feeding law enforcement any information or physical evidence they may gather.
And because they are not law enforcement, family members and other sources are often more comfortable sharing information with them, particularly when that source has a criminal record.
Christopher Mauk was last seen at his girlfriend Nikki Gallegos’ trailer in Sunny Meadows Village off North McCue Street on July 2, 2022. (Wyoming Truth photo by Jennifer Kocher)
Both women work with the nonprofit at night and on weekends. Koester, 40, is an office manager for a tire company in Gillette, while Means, 29, is an employee for the city’s parks and recreation department. The two met during a ground search for a missing nursing student, Irene Gakwa, who disappeared in February 2022 from the Gillette home that she shared with her fiancé Nathan Hightman.
Koester headed up search efforts after reading about Gakwa’s disappearance on social media. She and a small group of local women printed yard signs, posters, T-shirts and stickers and led over a dozen local searches. It was Koester’s work on Gakwa’s case that caught the attention of leaders at We Help the Missing, and they recruited her to train and work other cases.
Koester also has formed connections in the search and rescue communities — both in Wyoming and neighboring states — to bring in manpower, cadaver dogs and search teams to direct on-the-ground searches for missing people like Mauk.
Putting together pieces
In Laramie, Koester and Means talked to Mauk’s father, Jerry Mauk, and his cousin, Fawn Jachetta, at a coffee shop. Both Jerry and Jachetta have heard many rumors about Mauk’s disappearance, one of which Jerry checked into himself to no avail. Like the rest of the family, they try to remain optimistic that maybe Mauk left on his own accord to escape pending legal trouble for a probation violation.
Both agree that despite struggling with addiction, Mauk is a caring person who is much loved by his family. Mauk and Jachetta were close as kids, and she became emotional when Koester presented possible scenarios.
Nikki Gallegos shares her story with private investigators at the Love’s truck stop in Laramie on Aug. 12. (Courtesy photo from Ashley Means)
“We just want answers,” she said. “We want to bring him home.”
Jerry nodded stoically. He misses “Fid,” he said, who he nicknamed “Floppy Footed Fid” as a child because he clomped around in footed pajamas. Jerry said he has no idea what might have happened to his son, but hopes that he will be found alive.
Koester and Means also met with Gallegos at a truck stop off of 1-80. Gallegos herself has been the target of much speculation from some of Mauk’s family and others about the role she might have played in his disappearance. Following Mauk’s disappearance, Laramie police searched her property with cadaver dogs, but found nothing, she said.
She told the Wyoming Truth on Saturday that she has fully cooperated with police and maintains her innocence.
Citing an ongoing investigation, Laramie police would not comment on the search or whether Gallegos or anyone else is a person of interest in Mauk’s disappearance.
When Koester pulled into the truck stop parking lot, Gallegos was seated at a picnic table outside with her bike propped against a wall. Since Mauk’s mysterious departure, Gallegos admitted she has fallen on hard times. Like Mauk, she has also struggled with addiction in the past and fell into it again after he left, leading to her arrest for possession of a controlled substance and a short stint in jail.
Sober now, Gallegos is trying to get back on her feet as she grapples with Mauk’s disappearance.
We Help the Missing volunteer private investigators Stacy Koester (left) and Ashley Means scout potential search locations near Laramie for Christopher Mauk on Aug. 13. (Wyoming Truth photo by Jennifer Kocher)
The two were childhood sweethearts, she said, and had dated on and off for years. Prior to Mauk’s departure, they’d been dating for three months.
“We were meant to be together,” she said, tearing up. “He’s everything to me.”
A call from Mauk’s mother, Rose, put the cap on Koester and Means’ efforts. Rose had been sick and unable to meet with the pair, but thanked them for their interest finding her son. Rose believes Mauk is deceased; she said he would have contacted her by now if here were still alive.
“It’s killing me inside,” she said about living without answers. “I don’t know how to explain it. It’s hard when you lose somebody as close as I was with my son. And not hearing anything from him or anything. It just hurts.”
Koester and Means nodded. This is why they do what they do. To help find answers and bring closure.
Mauk is described as a white male, approximately 6-foot-2 and 140 pounds, with blue eyes and red hair. He is known to wear glasses, but did not have them when he left. He has scars on his abdomen, left and right eyes, as well as tattoos on his hand, left and right shoulders, right calf and both upper arms. He also is missing his left leg.
Anyone with information or who has had contact with Mauk is asked to call the Laramie Police Department at (307) 721-2526 or Stacy Koester with WHTM at (307) 299-6710.
Girlfriend of Missing Laramie Man Asks Public for Help
Chris Mauk, who is missing his left leg from a fireworks injury six years ago, does not have a prosthetic leg, his girlfriend said, and walks on crutches that often leave his hands blistered if hes on them for too long.
September 01, 20223 min read
Nikki Gallegos ticks off the days since 39-year-old Chris Mauk went missing. A hand-drawn calendar in neon pink and green marks all the crucial dates that continue to haunt her: July 2, the last day she saw or heard from Mauk. Aug. 5, the date Laramie police searched the trailer the couple shared together with cadaver dogs.
In between, other dates mark places the 41-year-old Laramie woman has searched on her own and notes from everyone she’s talked to about where Mauk might have gone. So far, there’s been no clues, other than a couple fleeting tips such as a person who claimed to see Mauk at a car show in Laramie and another person who claimed to see him in Cheyenne.
None of these have panned out.
The only thing she knows for sure is that Mauk walked out of their trailer on July 2 and hasn’t been seen or heard from since.
“I just don’t see how he could have gotten far without anyone seeing him,” Gallegos said.
Mauk, who is missing his left leg from a fireworks injury six years ago, does not have a prosthetic leg, Gallegos said, and walks on crutches that often leave his hands blistered if he’s on them for too long.
That in itself would limit his ability to get too far, she noted.
A conversation with Mauk prior to his leaving makes Gallegos suspect that drugs may be involved. He was really struggling with the loss of his leg, she said, and thought that people were making fun of him. His injury prevented him from working and he had been fighting to get disability since the accident happened, she said.
Before he left, he told her he had something to tell her that he didn’t want to conceal from her any longer, Gallegos said. It had been late, and he said they would talk as soon as he got out of the shower. Gallegos had fallen asleep in the interim while waiting for him and when she woke, he was gone. He’d written “I love you, beautiful” in lipstick on the mirror and left a new bracelet for her on the table.