Runner urges caution after alleged attack on Jordan River trail


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TAYLORSVILLE — A Taylorsville woman says she was attacked by a stranger while running along the Jordan River Parkway Monday morning. Now, she wants to make sure others are more prepared than she was.

Emily Jameson said she knows the Millrace Park trails well — she runs them several times a week. She's always carried pepper spray but never needed it until Monday.

Jameson — a runner since the age of 9 — was jogging alone when she approached a man walking in front of her.


He just started to run and charged me and punched me right in the shoulder. I screamed.

–Emily Jameson, runner


"It just seemed like someone I was just passing until I came right up on him," she said. "He ran at me and punched me."

The man gave no warning signs before the attack, Jameson said.

"He just started to run and charged me and punched me right in the shoulder," she said. "I screamed."

Jameson said she froze when the man began yelling at her to "get me my money."

After a few seconds, the man stopped and walked away.

"I don't think I've ever been that terrified," she said.

The attacker left a bruise on Jameson's shoulder. She said she'd never felt unsafe on the trails leading up to this point.

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"This guy would just attack anyone who agitated him in some way," she said.

Other runners on the trail Monday said they'd never felt threatened before.

"I feel safe," said Herold England. "Who is going to bother me?"

Jameson said she was frustrated she didn't know how to react appropriately.

"When it happened I froze," she said. "I had no idea what to do."

Russell Clegg with Z-Ultimate prepares his clients for threatening situations.


Avoiding problems is always so much easier than trying to solve a problem.

–Russell Clegg, Z-Ultimate


"The first thing is you want to be assertive," he said. "Yell, be direct, make eye contact."

Clegg teaches his students to get away if they can, or to fight back. But his best piece of advice: Be aware.

"Avoiding problems is always so much easier than trying to solve a problem," he said.

Jameson said she's now dedicated to teaching family and friends to be more prepared than she was.

"This is how we prepare ourselves when something like this happens," she said. "Everybody should be prepared in some way."

Jameson described her attacker as about 6-feet 2-inches, 180 pounds and wearing a white T-shirt and black shorts. She said he was very agitated and aggressive. Murray police officers are investigating.

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Devon Dolan

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