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Christopher ‘Hyrdro’ ‘Tweeter’ Todd Duke, 46

Daily Inter-Lake | UPDATED 3 weeks, 5 days AGO
| March 22, 2026 12:00 AM

Christopher Todd Duke, age 46, of Kalispell, passed away Sunday, March 15, 2026. He was born on Feb. 26, 1980, in Durham, North Carolina, to Thomas Duke and Tonya Page.

Chris dedicated his professional life to public safety and to the protection of this great nation. Following his graduation from McKinney High School — where he earned the nickname “Tweeter,” a Marine Corps call sign rooted in his days playing Texas football, straight out of Friday Night Lights —he enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. He served with the 1st Reconnaissance Battalion and 1st Marine Division from 1998 until 2002, including a tour of duty in Egypt. A service-related injury prevented his continuation in a reconnaissance unit, and Chris left his beloved Corps to serve in other capacities. Beginning in 2003, when he deployed to Iraq, “Hydro” was his call sign on contract deployments—after a Hydra-Shok bullet. A little bullet with a big impact. That was Chris. Little guy, big impact.

Chris’s ability to train others was superb. He served the U.S. Department of State from 2004–2007, providing security for U.S. diplomats and serving as lead instructor for Worldwide Personal Protective Services. The Central Intelligence Agency utilized his training skills, as well as his ability to serve as team leader, under the position of Global Response Staff Officer on multiple deployments through 2012.

Following his marriage and the birth of his twin daughters, Chris removed himself from this dangerous world and took a manufacturing job to be home to love and protect his new family. And he was something to behold at home. The man who had operated in combat zones around the world turned out to be a surprisingly relaxed, deeply unserious, gloriously goofy dad. Type A in every professional setting he ever entered, but laid back and easy at home. He turned out to have strong opinions about home decor — and he was not quiet about them. He made family nacho night a production — everyone got their own individual pan. Movie nights were sacred. He’d lick Megan’s McDonald’s French fries and put them back when she wasn’t looking, and he thought he was getting away with it. He sang randomly and without provocation. He always knew what to say. One of his future retirement plans was to become a professional at-home cook for his most cherished wife, apron included. Another was to be a professional baby-holder in the NICU.

However, in 2014, duty called again. Chris became the security operations manager for the newly created Amyntor Group, based in Montana. When Amyntor closed in 2018, Chris became a patrol officer with the Whitefish Police Department, where he served until his death. With his pronounced skills in instructing others, he served as their firearms and tactics instructor in addition to his regular duties as a patrol officer. At the same time, he served with the Northwest Montana Regional SWAT Team and the Flathead County Dive Team. Furthermore — because he wasn’t busy enough proving his badassery — from 2017 until present, Chris served Two Bear Air Rescue as a systems operator and rescue specialist, operating throughout Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington on rescue and law enforcement support operations.

Throughout his career, Chris continued to be a lifelong learner — even though that was counterintuitive, being a crayon-muncher. He developed educationally, both in-service at his jobs and at institutions of higher learning. He received a BA in Management from the American Military University and an AAS in Paramedicine from Flathead Valley Community College. All of this was done to better serve and care for others, which he did with extraordinary skill and sense of purpose, admired near and far by his colleagues and by those he saved. Chris remained, Semper Fidelis. Oorah.

Chris was predeceased by his stepfather, Kenneth Page.

Chris is survived by his wife of 16 years, Megan Whittington Duke; his children, Kylie Duke, Kodie Duke and Kiowa Duke, all of the home; his mother, Tonya Page, of Durham, North Carolina; his father, Thomas Duke (Christy), of McKinney, Texas; brothers, Kevin Duke (Missy) of Franklinton, North Carolina and Jeff Page (Kim) of Creedmoor, North Carolina; sister, Elizabeth Duke, of Raleigh, North Carolina and niece, Brynn Duke, of Franklinton, North Carolina.

We’re Dukes. We fight hard and we love hard.

A memorial service will be conducted on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, at 1 p.m. at Snowline Acres in Kalispell. Chaplain Larry Lautaret of the Whitefish Police Department and Mr. Mitch Barnes will officiate.

In lieu of flowers, please make donations to the Tunnel to Towers Foundation.

Link for Tunnel to Towers Foundation: https://t2t.org/. Link for Tunnel to Towers Foundation donation page: https://dogood.t2t.org/give/320847/#!/donation/checkout.

Johnson-Gloschat Funeral Home is caring for the family.