



Posted 02 July 2010 - 06:56 AM
Posted 03 July 2010 - 09:47 AM
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 06 July 2010 - 06:41 PM
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 13 July 2010 - 07:56 AM
Posted 28 September 2010 - 04:33 PM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 22 June 2011 - 11:24 AM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 03 July 2011 - 06:36 AM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 25 November 2011 - 05:38 PM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 28 October 2012 - 09:35 PM
Posted 08 December 2012 - 08:38 PM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 26 October 2013 - 11:47 AM
http://www.twincitie...g-remains-light
Rubén Rosario: Jacob Wetterling, still missing, remains a light in loved ones' hearts
By Rubén Rosario
POSTED: 10/22/2013 12:01:00 AM CDT
My porch light stays on, anyway, so I tweaked the annual suggestion from a child-safety advocacy group that bears his name and lit a candle instead Tuesday night to remember Jacob Wetterling.
Jacob, then 11, was abducted at gunpoint Oct. 22, 1989, by a masked gunman as he, a younger brother and a neighborhood friend rode bikes near their homes in St. Joseph, Minn. Despite thousands of tips and global news coverage, the case remains unsolved.
Most Minnesotans remember or know some details about the case. But the passage of time -- 24 years now -- has a way of making such a case fade from public memory.
Not for Patty or Jerry Wetterling, the missing boy's parents. Not for his three siblings, now in their 30s. Not for family and friends. They live it each day in some manner.
But the hope that one day he will be found never goes away. That hope -- irrational or reasonable, depending on the case -- is reinforced by incidents like the mysterious cases unfolding in Greece and Ireland in recent days.
A little blond girl dubbed "Maria" was found last week living with a couple in a Roma camp near the Greek town of Farsala following a police drug and weapons raid. The kid looked nothing like the couple, and a DNA test confirmed she was not theirs. The couple told police they were given the child by a Bulgarian woman who was unable to look after her, two weeks after she was born on Jan. 31, 2009.
Cops doubt their story. The girl was removed from the home while officials seek to identify her and find her biological parents.
"I have never seen a case where we are looking for the parents instead of the child," Delphine Moralis, deputy secretary general of Missing Children Europe, told reporters. "We have never issued a found poster; it has always been a missing poster."
Coincidentally, police in Ireland on Monday removed a 7-year old blond, blue-eyed girl from a Roma couple in Dublin. The couple gave police a birth certificate from Coombe Hospital in Dublin, which has no record of the birth.
KEEPING HOPE ALIVE
News of the cases has prompted parents of other missing children across the globe, including the U.S., to have lead case investigators inquire whether "Maria" -- who police believe might be 5 or 6 years old -- might be their child.
They include the British parents of Madeleine McCann, who was 3 in 2007 when she vanished without a trace during a family holiday in Portugal. And the parents of Lisa Irwin, a then-10-month-old girl who disappeared from her Kansas City home two years ago, asked the FBI to make inquiries into the case in Greece.
There are plenty of other cases in recent years to keep hope alive.
They range from the recovery of Elizabeth Smart in Utah several years ago to this year's rescue, from a house of horrors in Cleveland, of three young women who had been abducted years ago.
Wetterling has told me time and again over the years that these "found" cases juice up her hopes that Jacob, who would be 35 now, will one day find his way back and ring the doorbell to the family home. That's why the Wetterlings keep their porch light on throughout the years.
That's why, when the area code to their home phone number changed after Jacob's disappearance from 612 to 320, a volunteer called every known area code in the U.S. with the same seven-digit number to inform them about Jacob in case he ever called them.
"That was amazing," Wetterling said Tuesday during the annual family reunion at her home. Wetterling channeled her grief to become an outspoken child protection advocate. She currently serves as the chair to the board of directors of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. She is also program director of the Minnesota department of health's sexual violence prevention program.
"Jacob has a strong spirit," Wetterling said. Note the present tense. Keep hope alive.
TURN ON A LIGHT
Another person who never loses hope is Stearns County Sheriff John Sanner. He still has a detective actively assigned to the Jacob Wetterling case.
"The case remains open because a family and a community await answers they deserve," he said in an email Tuesday. "If we label the case 'cold' and file it away, the tendency is to forget about it. That cannot happen.
"Keeping the case assigned to a detective automatically gives the investigation both a sense of ownership and responsibility. In other words, life," he added. "I have never promised to solve the case; I have, however, promised to never stop trying to solve the case. That fire burns as passionately today as it did when it was kindled in 1989!"
And so, even if it is merely a gesture, turn on a light this week for Jacob and, by extension, all missing and exploited children out there.
MORE INFO
Anyone with information on the Jacob Wetterling case is asked to call the Stearns County sheriff at 320-251-4240. For information on Wetterling or any other missing child, call the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-THE-LOST.
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 15 May 2014 - 05:01 PM
http://www.kaaltv.co...shtml?cat=10151
Investigators Look at Possible Wetterling Link
Updated: 05/14/2014 8:17 PM
Created: 05/14/2014 9:00 PM KAALtv.com
PAYNESVILLE, Minn. (AP) - Investigators are taking a new look into whether the abduction of Jacob Wetterling nearly 25 years ago may be linked to similar cases in central Minnesota.
Jacob was 11 when he was abducted by a masked gunman near his St. Joseph home in October 1989. He has not been seen since and the case remains open.
KARE-TV (http://kare11.tv/1mW4lT1) reports Stearns County investigators are now taking a closer look at several stranger assaults that took place in Paynesville in 1986 and 1987. There were at least five assaults and the victims were all teenage boys.
Sheriff John Sanner tells The Associated Press that investigators assigned to the Wetterling abduction compared similarities with the Paynesville cases 25 years ago. Sanner says officials have been taking a new look for about six months.
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 18 May 2014 - 12:23 PM
http://minnesota.cbs...abduction-case/
New Developments Revealed In Jacob Wetterling Abduction Case
May 14, 2014 10:00 PM
MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — There is a new development in one of Minnesota’s most infamous unsolved crimes: the abduction of Jacob Wetterling.
A masked stranger grabbed the 11-year-old as he biked home from a store in St. Joseph nearly 25 years ago. Now, WCCO-TV has learned that a cluster of at least six unsolved sexual assaults on boys were never looked at as a possible lead in Wetterling’s case.
Those attacks happened two years prior to Wetterling’s kidnapping, just 30 miles away in Paynesville. They are now being investigated by the Stearns County Sheriff’s Office.
This new development in Minnesota’s most notorious kidnapping case begins in the most unlikely of places.
For four years, Joy Baker, a blogger from New London, has written a detailed blog about the Wetterling case. Last summer, her research uncovered articles in the Paynesville Press in 1986 and 1987. They detailed six unsolved sexual assaults on boys just two years before Wetterling’s abduction.
WEB EXTRA: Read Joy Baker’s Blog
“The police chief is asking for the public’s help in finding this guy who has been assaulting 12-16 year old boys,” Baker said of one article. “What went through my mind is that they have to be connected. How many psychopathic pedophiles can exist in a 20-mile radius?”
WCCO-TV asked Patty Wetterling if she had ever heard of the Paynesville cases and showed her two of the original police reports from the Paynesville attacks.
“We did not know about these cases until Joy Baker put it on her blog, and it was like, ‘Wow,’” Patty Wetterling said.
Those reports, as well as the newspaper accounts, list a series of striking parallels with Jacob Wetterling’s kidnapping. He was abducted at 9 p.m. as he rode his bike home from a convenience store with his brother and friend. The Paynesville attacks also all happened at night as the victims were heading home.
In two cases boys were attacked while riding bikes. They were sexually assaulted. The attacker sometimes wore a mask, which in one case was described as made from candy-striped, indoor-outdoor carpeting. He had a low, gruff voice and he threatened the boys with a knife or a gun, saying he would blow their heads off.
“Some of these were taken from a group of boys. That is really rare,” Patty Wetterling said. “The threat of a gun, the age of the victims, they were close to Jacob’s age. I do think there is a strong possibility they are connected to Jacob’s case.”
While two of the Paynesville victims were questioned by law enforcement after Jacob Wetterling disappeared, one Paynesville victim, who is now 40 and did not want to be named, told WCCO-TV he and other victims he knows were not, and that to this day they feel their cases both individually and as a group were overlooked.
Patty Wetterling said it’s frustrating to learn so many years later about the Paynesville cases, but she is also understanding.
“It was a different world back then. We didn’t have the Internet, we worked hard so that each law enforcement agency had a fax machine,” she said.
Current Stearns County Sheriff John Sanner agreed the lack of Internet and the fact that small town law enforcement agencies often acted independently may have kept the Paynesville cases from becoming a significant part of the Jacob Wetterling investigation.
“We can’t look back. We are actively investigating these cases now. We want anyone with any information to come forward no matter how small.
You could hold the key,” Sanner said.
——-
Sanner stressed there is another unsolved case that investigators have always linked to the abduction. Just months before Jacob Wetterling disappeared, a stranger kidnapped a 12-year-old boy named Jared in nearby Cold Spring. Jared told WCCO-TV the threat his kidnapper left him with: “I was told to run, don’t look back or he would shoot.”
Jared is speaking out for the first time in years. On Thursday, hear why he’s convinced the same man is behind all of these unsolved crimes against boys.
If you have any information about any of these cases, please call the Stearns County Sheriff at (320) 251-4240. You can also call the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-THE-LOST.
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 27 December 2014 - 10:37 PM
http://www.startribu.../269910761.html
Tuesday marks the 25th anniversary of Amy Sue Pagnac's disappearance
Article by: KELLY SMITH , Star Tribune Updated: August 4, 2014 - 7:56 PM
Amy Sue Pagnac, who would be 38, disappeared Aug. 5, 1989.
Tuesday marks a difficult milestone for Amy Sue Pagnac’s family and friends: the 25th anniversary of the 13-year-old’s disappearance.
While police continue to investigate the Maple Grove cold case, there are few clues to where she went that August day in 1989 and where she is 25 years later.
“It’s a very painful time of the year,” said her sister, Susan Pagnac Jr., who was 8 when Amy disappeared. “The loss of all those years …”
For the past two months, attention on Amy’s story and police work has ramped up, with FBI investigators, state forensic scientists and police officers searching the Pagnacs’ house and digging up the back yard in May. In June, they dug up areas of the family’s Isanti County farm. And this Saturday Amy will be among those that her Osseo classmates will honor at their 20-year high school reunion.
“We’re always looking [for Amy],” said her sister. “And we still want anyone with information to come forward and go to talk to the police again.”
Police say Amy, who would now be 38 years old, could be alive or dead. Last Saturday, Cpt. Keith Terlinden declined to say what prompted the two searches or whether anything was found, saying it could compromise the active investigation. But since attention on the case resurfaced in May, he said the two detectives assigned to the case have received a “fair amount” of tips.
“We’re continuing to work with the FBI and other agencies to try to bring Amy home,” he said. “It’s obviously still a high priority for our department. We’ll pull out all the stops to follow up on any leads.”
On Aug. 5, 1989, Amy and her father, Marshall Midden, went up to the family’s 140-acre wooded farm in Maple Ridge Township to harvest trees and farm vegetables. About 5 p.m., Midden and Amy were returning home, when he stopped at a Holiday gas station 2 miles away in Osseo, Midden told police. He said he used the bathroom and came out to find the car empty.
Amy’s mother, Susan Pagnac, has said in Star Tribune interviews that Amy was prone to seizures, wandering off at times. She also said Amy could’ve been abducted for prostitution, with someone claiming to spot Amy at a strip club years later and at a bus or train station in 1992.
Police haven’t confirmed those details. But the amount of time — more than two decades — that’s passed has posed a challenge to the case. There also is no suspect or evidence of a crime.
Time, however, has improved DNA technology. In fact, in 2013, Amy’s case was mentioned in an Associated Press article on the BCA’s new efforts to use DNA samples to identify human remains statewide. While forensic scientists have been testing DNA for decades, in the last few years, extraction and testing capabilities have advanced, allowing scientists to derive DNA from old remains, even if damaged.
“Law enforcement has changed significantly the last 25 years in the scientific realm,” Terlinden said. “We’re using some of the best experts nationwide to help with this case.”
Just two months after Amy disappeared, Jacob Wetterling was abducted by a masked gunman in St. Joseph, Minn. In 2010, investigators swarmed a farm near the spot where Wetterling disappeared, digging up six truckloads of dirt and ash. Four years later, nothing new has been reported in his case.
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
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If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
Posted 29 October 2015 - 01:18 PM
http://fox8.com/2015...cob-wetterling/
Person of interest named in 1989 kidnapping of Jacob Wetterling
POSTED 5:07 PM, OCTOBER 29, 2015, BY ASSOCIATEDPRESS AND FOX8WEBCENTRAL
MINNEAPOLIS— Federal authorities say a Minnesota man is a “person of interest” in the disappearance of Jacob Wetterling, whose mother became a national advocate for the cause of missing children after his abduction in 1989.
They made the announcement at a news conference Thursday. A 52-year-old Minnesota man was arrested Wednesday on several child pornography charges. WCCO reports that authorities said hundreds of images of child pornography were found in the man’s home. Investigators also found video reportedly secretly taken by the man showing children playing, riding bikes and delivering newspapers in the neighborhood.
An application for a search warrant in that case says that authorities wanted to search for items including human remains, a red T-shirt with the name Wetterling on the back and a red hockey team jacket with the name Jacob stitched on the front.
The search was carried out July 28.
Wetterling was 11 when he was abducted Oct. 22, 1989, near his home in the central Minnesota community of St. Joseph. According to WCCO, the little boy was riding bikes with his brother and a friend when a masked man took him at gunpoint.
Patty and Jerry Wetterling issued a statement asking for help in the case of their missing son Jacob as authorities investigated a man with possible ties to the boy’s abduction in 1989.
“The search for Jacob is an ongoing investigation and we will watch and learn like everyone else. Right now we know what is being reported. We know what you all know,” they said.
The Wetterlings also thanked everyone involved in the investigation so far.
“We are so grateful for the prayers, the support and the hope shared in our search for Jacob and the search for answers,” they said.
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
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