One spring morning, Marcy opened the balcony door of her room in a log cabin and walked down the driveway to the main gate of a small ranch buried in the rolling hills of western Montana.
She had been staying at Crooked Tree Ranch, an anti-human trafficking safe house and rehabilitation center, since January to recover from years of sexual abuse.
But that day, she was leaving. Her concerns over the organization had grown too strong for her to ignore.
"I walked down the windy road to nowhere," Marcy recalled in an interview with the Missoulian in May. "Finally I reached this place where there was people ... this girl said she could give me a ride into town."
Marcy said she fled Crooked Tree Ranch on foot in early May following a build up of concerns surrounding the organization's religi