Colorado park ranger accused of making false report of being stabbed

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Mountain Landscape with Evergreens (MizC / Getty Images / iStockphoto)

Colorado sheriff's deputies launched a massive search for a man wanted for stabbing a park ranger — only to learn the reported attack was an "elaborate hoax," officials said Thursday.

Callum Heskett, a Colorado Parks and Wildlife seasonal ranger at Staunton State Park, will face multiple misdemeanor and felony counts stemming from the allegedly false report, according to the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office.

Heskett, 26, radioed for help at about 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, saying he'd been stabbed before giving a detailed description of his attacker who had fled on foot at the state park near Denver, officials said.

The sheriff's department sent an alert to 8,600 local residents to look out for the suspect while several "schools and nearby citizens were asked to remain locked down for safety," according to the sheriff's statement.

The department's SWAT and drone teams and state air assets were sent on the hunt for a 6-foot, 200-pound white male assailant, officials said, as Heskett was airlifted to the hospital.

Two "people of interest were detained" and interviewed, before they were released, according to the sheriff,

"As the investigation progressed, inconsistencies in Heskett’s statements emerged. That, along with other conflicting and questionable evidence, further raised concerns about the validity of his allegations," the sheriff continued.

"After investigators conducted their first interview with Heskett, it became even more clear that his story was flawed and erroneous."

The sheriff called the report by Heskett an "elaborate hoax."

It's believed Heskett stabbed himself and was still under a doctor's care on Thursday, officials said.

He's facing a slew of charges including felony suspicion of an attempt to influence a public servant and tampering with evidence along with misdemeanor false reporting to authorities, reckless endangerment and obstructing government operations and the petty offense of official misconduct.

It wasn't clear on Friday morning of Heskett had hired or been assigned a defense lawyer to speak on his behalf.

There were no answers at publicly listed phone numbers for Heskett and his parents when NBC News called, seeking their comments on Friday morning.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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