Remote Puna’s Edge: Apprehension on Big Island Offers Little Solace Amidst Deeper Woes
POLICY WIRE — Honolulu, USA — It isn’t the tranquil surf or the scent of plumeria that’s been hanging heavy in the Puna district air lately. No, it’s been something far more...
POLICY WIRE — Honolulu, USA — It isn’t the tranquil surf or the scent of plumeria that’s been hanging heavy in the Puna district air lately. No, it’s been something far more unsettling: a dread that only settles deep in your gut when the very foundations of communal safety begin to fray. Folks here know a thing or two about living on the edge—geographically, economically, existentially. But three bodies, found over a grim couple of days in the lush, unforgiving landscape of the Big Island, changed the flavor of ‘edge’ entirely.
After a frantic, sprawling manhunt that involved an almost unbelievable concentration of resources—state, federal, and local agencies—authorities finally snagged Jacob Baker, 36, Thursday afternoon. He’d been accused of murder, burglary, — and a whole mess of other charges. They’d described him as [QUOTE_PLACEHOLDER] which, honestly, didn’t feel like an overstatement given the circumstances. It wasn’t some slick takedown you see in movies, though. It was grittier, messier. Deborah Davis, heading home, saw it unfold right in front of her. Slowed down by something—instinct, perhaps—she witnessed a policewoman chasing a man down the road near one of the deceased’s homes. “I just stopped and I’m thinking, this is it, this is the guy,” she recounted. And it was. The chase veered into the thick jungle, but shortly thereafter, several officers emerged. Shirtless, handcuffed, Baker was in custody.
It sounds dramatic, but it felt earned for the police. Davis watched them give each other high-fives — and shout “chee hoo,” a local cheer. “They were very happy,” she confirmed. “And I was very grateful. I was thanking them with tears in my eyes.” A moment of raw relief, no doubt, for those living amidst the paranoia. But that relief? It’s thin. Like much of the soil here, it covers deeper, less visible fissures.
This isn’t just about one bad actor, is it? Not when you look closer. Weeks before the bodies of Robert Shine, John Carse, and an as-yet-unidentified 79-year-old man turned up—strangled, or suffering “sharp force trauma,” as police reported—Baker was already on radar. Two women, residing on a farm where he’d apparently been staying, tried to get restraining orders against him. He’d allegedly threatened them. But a judge dismissed their applications, citing [QUOTE_PLACEHOLDER] One woman, a property co-owner, claimed he threatened women and a disabled man, even saying he’d trespass and [QUOTE_PLACEHOLDER] Talk about prescient. Stephen Shaffer, whose ex-wife had a run-in with Baker, stated flatly, [QUOTE_PLACEHOLDER] Angry, — and then some. Because what happens when those initial alarm bells are ignored? Or, more to the point, legally discounted?
Puna itself, on the eastern side of this enormous island (measuring over 4,000 square miles, according to geographical data, an area roughly equivalent to half the size of Kashmir), is a place of stark contrasts. Tropical, sure. But also barren lava fields, remoteness, — and socioeconomic strata that cling to the very edge. Tiffany Edwards Hunt, a resident, painted a stark picture of Puna: [QUOTE_PLACEHOLDER] It’s just 17 miles from Hilo, the main town, but bad roads—unpaved, often—make it feel a world away. That isolation, Hunt added with blunt observation, creates an environment where [QUOTE_PLACEHOLDER] And she’s not wrong.
What This Means
The apprehension of Jacob Baker is undoubtedly a kinetic win for law enforcement, and a moment of exhale for Puna’s beleaguered residents. But the political — and economic implications here stretch far beyond the immediate satisfaction of justice. This case throws into stark relief the challenges faced by jurisdictions attempting to govern and provide services—including justice—to sprawling, under-resourced, and isolated communities.
The judge’s earlier denial of restraining orders isn’t a mere oversight; it points to a systemic chasm between genuine threats and legal thresholds for intervention. In many places, from these Hawaiian outposts to the remote, sparsely populated regions of rural Balochistan in Pakistan, the concept of legal recourse can feel distant, complicated by local customs, land disputes, and the simple fact that formal institutions are thin on the ground. Lawlessness, as Hunt noted, isn’t born of malice alone; it often festers in the absence of robust governance, clear legal structures, and accessible economic opportunity.
For policymakers, this Big Island saga should be less about celebration — and more about introspection. What societal fault lines permitted a man with 20 other cases in the court record in the past two decades, many of them traffic infractions, to continue operating at the periphery, escalating his alleged behavior from harassment to homicide? It points to a need for deeper community engagement, more accessible legal aid (Baker represented himself in most cases), and certainly, better resourced social services. When communities feel abandoned to fend for themselves, whether in the jungle fringes of Hawaii or the mountainous tracts of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, the inevitable consequence is an erosion of trust in the state. And when trust erodes, fear rushes in to fill the void, creating environments where minor disputes can quickly—and catastrophically—spiral out of control. Apprehension helps, sure. But the deep-seated problems? They’re still out there, hiding in plain sight.


