Going West: True Crime - Jodi Huisentruit // 502
Episode Date: May 13, 2025In June of 1995, a 27-year-old morning news anchor vanished outside her Iowa apartment complex as she rushed to go to work in the dark, early morning hours. When police came upon the scene, they found... her high heeled shoe, and various other items like a hairdryer strewn next to her car door - proving that she likely been abducted. As evidence of a stalker came into light, with her reporting being followed months earlier, and telling friends of disturbing anonymous phone calls, investigators worked hard to find a suspect. This is the disappearance of Jodi Huisentruit.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What is going on true crime fans? I'm your host T and I'm your host Daphne and you're listening to going West
Hello everybody. Thank you for tuning in today. Man, over the years,
so many of you have recommended this case,
including Sarah, Eloy, Molly, Alexis,
Daniel, Jean, Javier, Courtney, Megan,
Olivia, Kyle, and Jill.
Wow, that was a lot of recommendations from you guys.
I mean, we've wanted to cover this case forever,
and it just finally felt like the right time,
especially with what has recently come out in the news.
Something was released, like a sealed document was released
just a few weeks ago.
But this is one of those cases that is so mysterious
that it is really stuck in my mind
since I heard it for the first time
on another True Crime podcast podcast like seven years ago.
So it's just one of those really disturbing perplexing stories. Yeah, there's a little bit
of like stalker elements going on in this episode. Yeah, it's actually quite a creepy tale. Well, 502 of going west so let's get into it In June of 1995, a 27-year-old morning news anchor vanished outside her Iowa apartment
complex as she rushed to go to work in the dark early morning hours.
When police came upon the scene, they found her high-heeled shoe and various other items like a hairdryer strewn next to
her car door, proving that she had likely been abducted.
As evidence of a stalker came into light telling friends of disturbing anonymous phone calls,
investigators worked hard to find a suspect. This is the disappearance of Jodie Housentroot.
Jodie Sue Housentroot was born on June 5, 1968 in Long Prairie, Minnesota to mother Imogene, who went by Jane, and Maurice Housentroot.
Eighteen years after getting married, Jane and Maurice welcomed baby Jodie into the family
But Jodie also had a sister named Joanne who she was very close with
Jodie was known to have a strong bond with her family in general and her parents were always
Super supportive and as far as it goes for Jodie's personality. She was bubbly. She was charismatic
She had this sharp wit that kept everybody laughing, which really leads into her future career so well, as we will discuss.
Jodi grew up in her birthplace of Long Prairie, Minnesota, in a close-knit community where
she was involved in a variety of activities.
She attended Long Prairie High School, where she was active in sports, especially golf,
where she led her high school golf team to victory in the Minnesota Class A state tournament.
And I don't know what it is about like a high school golf team that seems so, I don't know,
like unnatural maybe because it's not really like a team sport that you go to the games
like football or basketball.
Yeah, yeah.
Like I always forget my high school had a golf team.
Yeah, I wanted to join my high school's golf team.
I never did, but I always golfed, so.
That tracks.
Well, anyway, she was a really big golfer.
You guys are gonna see that in this episode.
So she was doing big things for her team.
And then after graduating high school in 1986,
she moved on to St. Cloud University
in the nearby city of St. Cloud, Minnesota.
It's just an hour away, where she majored in mass communications with a concentration
on journalism.
And although she wanted to explore career options in journalism, she still loved playing
sports and actually was a part of the basketball team at her college, even playing softball
and volleyball on the side.
So really Jody was she was into fitness across the board, but really she loved sports. Yeah,
she was athletic and smart. Also, she was really into exercising in general. Like she always went
on neighborhood runs. She was a roller blader. Like she did it all. She graduated from St. Cloud University in 1990 as she was turning 22 years old, and
then jumped straight into the workforce.
But before exploring her passion of storytelling just yet, Jodie briefly worked as a flight
attendant for Northwest Airlines, because she was so kind and so personable.
So this would have been a really good career path for her, I think,
but soon enough, she knew she wanted to take a stab at journalism.
So in 1991, 23-year-old Jodie got a job in Cedar Rapids, Iowa,
at CBS affiliate KGAN-TV,
which marked her entry into broadcast journalism.
Well, a year later, Jodie left Iowa, and she moved back to her home state of Minnesota,
but this time to Alexandria, where she joined the team at ABC affiliate KSAX-TV.
And she joined them as a reporter and anchor.
But in 1993, she moved back to Iowa, now in Mason City,
which at the time had a population of around 30,000 people,
where she landed a job as the morning news anchor for the show Daybreak,
with CBS affiliate KIMT-TV.
And it was during her time at KIMT that Jodie really became known for her captivating, on-air presence,
and her commitment to sharing news stories.
Now, Jodie's typical workday started pretty early.
She'd usually get to the station super early around 3am to get ready for daybreak, which
was the morning show that aired at 6am.
And despite the early hours, Jodie was just so committed to her job, and that earned her
a lot of respect from her colleagues.
And honestly beyond, because when the clock hit 6am, local Mason City residents watched
as this effervescent and well-presented young woman shared the news through her thick Minnesota
accent, covering local stories to even larger breaking headlines like the O.J. Simpson trial
in 1994.
I mean, people just really loved Jodie.
She was a dedicated worker, but also had amazing qualities out of the office.
Like, Jodie was known to write beautifully handwritten notes and postcards to loved ones regularly.
She was just a kind of thoughtful, caring person who always remembered people's birthdays.
Jodie's niece remembers her Aunt Jodie often showering her in presents from teddy bears to roller skates and even a very special music
box with a twirling ballerina inside. Jodie was even a member of the Optimist
Club which is a volunteer organization dedicated to serving youths and aiming
to quote bring out the best in kids through various programs and initiatives.
So yeah, I mean she was just like a community person.
She really wanted to put a lot of her time into her family
and the people that you know were surrounding her in her community.
Which really makes so much sense for her because
she it's not just about being on TV for her even though she loved that element as well with her
cute blonde bob. Yeah, how could you not?
Yeah, but it's also she really is so genuinely community oriented.
She loves talking to people.
She loves interviewing people.
She loves giving people the information that they need that's relevant to their life.
Like she was just a people person.
I mean, even at her work desk, like she had this short essay framed and it was just a people person. I mean even at her work desk like she had
this short essay framed and it was like a set of principles for living a more
positive purposeful life so she really cared about that kind of thing. And she
really should have had this this long career brightening people's days and
telling others the morning news but Jodie Whoosentroot would soon become the story herself.
It was late June of 1995.
Summer had officially arrived
and newly 27-year-old Jodie's schedule was packed.
On Saturday, June 24th, Jodie and her friends Tami,
Annie, and John Van Sise took a 150 mile road trip to Coralville Lake
just to spend the weekend days like swimming and water skiing behind John's boat.
And then the night bar hopping in nearby Iowa City, which remember is where Jodi used to
work.
So this sounds like such a fun weekend, you know, first summer weekend trip. Sounds exactly like something I would love.
No, literally, this is like you to a T.
So she just had so much fun letting loose
and even running into some old coworkers.
And this was especially enjoyed
after what Jodie had recently been experiencing
because around this time, Jodie sent a letter
to her good friend Kelly in
Mississippi that she was being stalked and that she worried about her safety.
Now oddly enough, one of her old co-workers back in Iowa City where she
had been visiting this weekend, a woman named Amy Johnson had reportedly been
experiencing something similar in the last couple months.
So that's very strange because obviously there's a connection there.
Yeah, I mean, we don't really know if Jodie ran into Amy during this trip.
Like I just said, she ran into some coworkers, or some old coworkers,
but we don't know if one of those people was Amy because that has not been released. But this is obviously, yeah,
it is such a, a fascinating connection because here's what Amy said about it
later. Quote,
one was an email I got from out of state telling me that a sexual predator of
sorts was following me in his car. That frightened me terribly.
And another time would be there was a mentally disturbed man
who felt like he had to get to me
to tell me that Channel 2 was broadcasting
negative images over the airwaves
that were killing his parents.
That those negative images
were coming from the son of Sam.
Okay, very weird.
Imagine like this man knows who you are, he watches you on the news,
and he is thinking that something you're a part of is killing his parents and that a serial killer
from the 1970s is behind it. Like this is just such a disturbing thing to receive. It's very,
very unhinged and I feel like just because you're not like this national celebrity, you can still
get these types of people stalking and following you,
even if you're just a local news anchor.
It's actually crazy how many people in the spotlight
in any way have stalkers or have experiences like this
that they don't want to share because they're afraid.
It's like when you put yourself out there like this on TV and people watch
you every day, they think they know you, they become comfortable with you, and it can be
really scary like this.
Yeah, they feel like they're almost connected to you in some way.
Well, the second man, the one that she described as mentally disturbed, was found and absconded around the time
that Jodie herself went missing.
We don't know exactly when,
but he was reportedly sent to a psychiatric hospital.
And just all this to say again,
that people in Jodie's career, even in her circle,
were experiencing similar terrors that she herself was.
But sadly, Kelly would not receive this letter from Jodie about her stalker until after she
went missing.
Because just a couple of days after this trip to the lake, she would be gone.
Going into the week in question, the day after returning from the lake, work was
really busy, but excitement buzzed in the air because her friend Stacey's wedding
was that weekend and Jodie was set to stand as a bridesmaid. So it was the
start of like a hectic but very happy week and Monday June 26th began like any
other weekday. Jodie arrived at KIMT station at around 3 a.m
As she always did and prepared for the morning segment daybreak as usual
After her regular broadcast of sharing local news Jodi participated in the Mason City Chamber of Commerce golf tournament at the Highland Park
golf course
But that afternoon a rain shower swept through the area.
So Jodie headed home to change into something dry
and suitable for the evening ahead.
Then later, she arrived at the Mason City Country Club
where she attended an awards dinner
and mingled with friends and colleagues.
Now, according to FindJodie.com, during the event,
Jodie mentioned to two different golfers
that she had been receiving, quote, nasty and naughty phone calls.
Now, it doesn't seem like she really elaborated much on this disturbing development in her
life, but she did mention that she was considering changing her phone number because of this,
so it must have been at least somewhat incessant. And he was obviously scaring her enough to tell multiple people that she came
into contact with, and of course as we know, her friend Kelly. And actually
speaking of Kelly, after Jodie got home that evening at 8 24 p.m. she called
Kelly's house but she wasn't home., Jodie spoke briefly with Kelly's husband,
who said that Jodie seemed in good spirits during their short interaction.
Well, later that night, Jodie stopped by at her friend John Van Sise's home, one of the friends
that she went on that lake trip with, to watch a video from her recent surprise birthday party
that occurred only a few
weeks prior. One that John himself helped throw for her. Now it's worth noting that
John was 22 years older than Jodie, but they were still good friends after
meeting when he previously lived in her apartment complex. And here's a couple
quotes from John on Jodie. Quote, I'm Jodie's dad. No, I'm not really her dad, but I feel like I'm her dad because I watch over her.
And then later he said, quote,
I just loved watching her have fun. I tried to watch over her.
I tried to check on her once in a while. Not all the time, just once in a while.
See how she's getting along.
If you ever go into her apartment and you see men's clothes, they're mine.
If I had a shirt that she liked, you know, I'd wear it for a while and then I'd give it to her."
Very interesting
dynamic there.
Feels a little concerning just the fact that he's like,
well, if she liked this shirt that I was wearing, I would wear it for her all the time and then I would retire it to
her. It's kind of, it's a little weird.
It definitely feels like he really enjoyed her attention. He liked being in her life. He liked being somebody that she considered a friend.
You know, it feels like he's really into what they have going on.
But on the flip side of this, she also, you know, went to the lake with him. So it seemed like there was something that was mutual there.
Yes.
But I do agree that the comments are just a bit weird.
Well, she was at his house that Monday night.
Like you said, Heath, she was watching that birthday party video.
So after spending some time at John's just up the street from her own apartment,
she reportedly left and went back home where she fell asleep.
As we know, working as a local news anchor, Jodi's shifts began hours before the sun even
rose for the day.
I'm going to tell you the times again just so you remember.
The morning broadcast she hosted, Daybreak, always aired at 6 a.m. so Jodie and her colleagues had to arrive at KIMT station by about
3 a.m. to prepare. But on the morning of Tuesday June 27th 1995 it seems like
Jodie missed her alarm. A producer of Daybreak named Amy Coons was at the
station reading over the material for the day and realized that Jodie was a
no-show.
And this wasn't all that weird, I'll say, like sometimes she was late for work, or at
least late for work prep, because she would often sleep through her alarm.
And it's interesting to bring this up because I feel like in most other cases that we cover,
we always say they would never just no-show work or they were never late, but Jodie was known to sometimes do this.
So she's kind of giving it a little time,
giving Jodie a grace period.
But a few minutes after 4 a.m.
with Jodie being over an hour late,
Amy punched in the number on the phone to Jodie's apartment.
Groggily, 27-year-old Jodi answered and asked for the time, to which Amy said,
it's 10 past four.
So obviously if the first thing she's doing is asking for the time, she is asleep when
this phone call comes in.
So with Amy saying that it was 10 past four, she could tell that Jodi was suddenly wide
awake in a panic and she
told Amy that she would be right there.
I mean, her apartment was only a five minute drive from the station.
Now aside from being tired, Amy didn't notice anything off with Jodie's demeanor, which
is an important thing to note because Amy was the last known person to speak to Jodie who's intrude.
Jodie hung up the phone and scurried around her apartment,
leaving clear signs for investigators later to tell that she got dressed,
and grabbed her hairdryer and a can of hairspray to bring to work,
which were essentials for maintaining her signature blonde bob.
Clutching her vanity gear to her chest, she bolted out the door into the still dark morning.
The sun was over an hour from rising at this point.
We know that she walked down the stairs of her second floor apartment, down to her car
in the small parking lot that was right in front of the building.
This is a very small building.
This wasn't like a major complex.
Her car is right out front.
And actually, her car was parked only 12 feet away
from the apartment building door.
And as her arms were overflowing with things,
she began to unlock the door of her red 1995 Mazda Miata.
But alarmingly, by 5 a.m., Jodie still had not arrived
to work, and countless phone calls to her apartment
now went unanswered.
So Amy was just absolutely confused by this.
It had been almost an hour since she spoke to Jodie,
who was awake and aware that she was running very late.
And also, she had a quick commute to the station.
Remember, it's only five minutes away.
So, for her to be this late was just completely odd.
Another hour came and went, and when 6am rolled around,
Jodie still had not arrived at work.
So, Amy actually had to fill in for the 6am daybreak newscast
that was an hour-long segment.
When Amy finished this segment, panic was an hour-long segment. When Amy finished
this segment, panic was really starting to set in. So much so that at 7 13 a.m.
Amy called the police to request a welfare check on Jodie. Shortly after
calling, police arrived to Jodie's apartment complex in Mason City. And to
their dismay, Jodie's car was parked still in that parking lot.
And outside the driver's side door of Jodie's red Mazda Miata, right there on the ground,
was a collection of Jodie's personal belongings strewn right beside her vehicle. Her corded
gray hair dryer, a red kitten heel shoe, earrings, and a can of hairspray were
all lying there in a glamorous but disorderly manner.
And the solo key to her Mazda was also found amongst the varying objects, as though right
as she was reaching her car, something happened that caused her to drop everything that she
was holding as she rushed to work.
Now, concerningly, the metal of her key was actually bent,
insinuating that she inserted that key into the lock cylinder of the door before being disrupted.
Now, her car, which was a very recent purchase of hers, just a few weeks old actually,
had keyless entry, which was a new technology around this time, but it doesn't appear that she used it that morning.
And I mean, maybe she just kind of wasn't used to it yet.
That is such a puzzling piece of this story, is if the metal was bent, like if you think
about how thick a car key is, that metal is not just easy to bend.
So it would make more sense if it was sitting in the lock when a struggle happened and maybe
she was forced against the key and then it bent the key and then it fell out onto the
floor.
But it is interesting that she had keyless entry even in 1995.
And like you're saying, was she just not used to using it?
Did it get bent in a different way?
That's just, it really proves a struggle.
Yeah, I mean, it's really hard to say what exactly happened because there were no witnesses,
but eerily, there were actually visible drag marks on the muddied patch of asphalt near
the car from somebody's feet, but there was no clear path to where they led.
On the vehicle itself was an unidentified partial palm print, along with a strand of hair which were later tested.
Though at this time, we don't really know what came of that testing.
But the scene very much showed signs of a struggle, making it seem like she was approached while entering her car and
forcibly taken away from the scene.
like she was approached while entering her car and forcibly taken away from the scene. Police were told that Jodie never went anywhere without her purse and briefcase, and both
of those items were just nowhere to be found.
But everything else was just left behind.
Now her car sat abandoned in that parking lot, her vanity items scattered about, but there was no sign of 27 year old Jody who's intrude. you Within hours of discovering Jodi's car, police officers and local volunteers began searching
the area around her apartment complex and beyond, including fields and wooded areas,
but nothing came up in any of those early searches.
Investigators searched Jodie's apartment as well
in an attempt to gather some clues, of course,
but overall, her apartment was pretty much in order,
aside from like a general, normal house mess.
In her home, a standing rack that displayed her many hats
was overflowing with accessories,
and she clearly had a lot of clothes and shoes.
In her home, she also had a collection of golf clubs, there was mail on the dining table
mixed up with some vitamin bottles, and her comforter was pulled over her bed.
So the apartment didn't look at all like it had been ransacked by any means. It really seemed like whoever had attacked her had done so outside by her car.
However, while it was believed that Jodie returned home alone the night before her disappearance,
as investigators looked around her apartment for evidence of a guest, some signs inside
suggested otherwise.
Like for one, in the kitchen sink, there were some open cans of beer and there
were also two wine glasses found on the countertop, which naturally made it look
like Jodie had very recently had a visitor over, right?
Now, obviously this didn't necessarily mean that someone had been over the
night before she vanished, you know, sometimes
dishes pile up, like especially for me wine glasses because they can be so finicky to wash and dry.
Like I've been known to keep a couple by the sink to dry sometimes for a couple days
because I just don't get to actually putting them away in the cabinet.
Yeah, and sometimes they're so thin that you don't want to put them in the dishwasher because they could break, so...
Yeah, exactly.
...hand washing them can be just annoying.
Yeah, and I mean, Jodie was so busy.
She had just been on a trip, so maybe these were from before the trip.
I mean, it's just impossible to say based on the glasses alone, but investigators also
found something else.
So when they went into the bathroom, they noticed that the toilet seat was up, which
is notoriously done by men.
Women would have no reason to leave the toilet seat up.
So obviously, this was kind of concerning to them.
And surely at some point, Jodie would have had to have used the toilet between arriving
home the night before and when she was leaving for work.
Which again made investigators believe that a male visitor had recently used that bathroom.
The only thing that I could explain or the only reason that maybe she would put it up is if she like threw up or something.
Yeah, or if she was possibly cleaning it.
Yeah, but then it's like if she's gonna clean it and she's or if she's getting sick
in it, she's going to close the lid, you know, so it's like it is very weird because if she
had gone to the restroom, even if she was in such a hurry that morning, she didn't even
get to go and she was going to wait till she got to work.
Like you just said, she would have gone the night before.
So that that is pretty weird to me, honestly.
And I completely get that.
Like the wine glasses being there, the toilet seat being up, you know, it obviously raises suspicion,
but this really did not lead to any concrete answers in the investigation.
Now, due to the unusual nature of Jodie's disappearance, foul play was and is absolutely suspected, and it always has been.
So early on in the investigation, the FBI became involved in the search. was and is absolutely suspected, and it always has been.
So early on in the investigation, the FBI became involved in the search.
So with the extra help, within days, over 100 suspects had been interviewed, but none
of them were seriously considered for this case.
As we mentioned, only one of her bright red heeled shoes was found at the crime scene,
and the second shoe was never located, which added to the mystery of her disappearance, and it
also gave police hope that the other shoe could potentially be uncovered and lead them
to another clue.
Police and investigators scoured the neighborhood looking for any other items of Jody's, and
the Mason City Fire Department even searched the Winnebago River, which ran right behind Jody's apartment complex.
Special teams were brought in, including canine search units to help track her scent, and
helicopters were utilized to conduct aerial searches of the area in case, you know, she
had possibly moved further out of the city.
But unfortunately, these efforts did not result in finding Jodie.
Community members came together very quickly, forming volunteer search parties that covered
miles of terrain around Mason City. They searched fields, ditches, forests, and rural areas,
just hoping to find any trace of her. Well in a disturbing development, after Jodie went missing as neighbors in her building
were naturally interviewed, multiple reported hearing what sounded like a scream at around
4am that morning, which would have been around the time Jodie left her apartment for work.
And this is a small city, there's no other reason to hear a scream if multiple people are saying that around that time in that exact area.
Like, what are the chances this is something that is not Jodie?
Yeah, and this honestly goes back to one of the bonus episodes that we covered where a bunch of people, like, heard a woman being murdered,
and they didn't really do anything. It's one of those things where if you don't physically see it,
it's almost like, eh, well it's probably someone just fucking around.
Yeah, and for anybody wondering, that is the case of Kitty Genevieve's,
which we covered recently on Real Crime.
That is a wild story.
And yeah, I mean, if people heard it also, if they're kind of,
they heard it in their sleep, you're like, wait, did I really hear that?
Like recently, we heard like a gunshot in our sleep,
and we're like, was that a gunshot, or did I imagine that, or did I hear that? Like recently, we heard like a gunshot in our sleep and we're like, was that a gunshot
or did I imagine that or did I dream that?
Like what was that from?
And that's when you get on Citizen, the app, but you obviously couldn't do that back when
Jodie disappeared.
So like with multiple people saying this, it really did feel like that most likely was
Jodie.
And I will say as well, some even mentioned a mysterious white van in the area around the time as well
One man who lived in the neighborhood claimed to see a white 40 conaline the morning Jodi disappeared
He explained that it was parked in a way that made him originally think that it was a police vehicle and that it was also
Around four in the morning. So it was dark outside. Was it a really a white van?
Was it a different color? Did you really see this? Was it connected?
Or is this just somebody in the area's van? Yeah.
It's like all these people are coming forward with these clues that could help,
but we really don't know if they're reliable.
And I wonder kind of what made them think that it was so weird.
Like maybe if the van had been parked or like backed up into a parking space and it was there was a person just sitting in the
Driver's seat that would be kind of weird
Yeah, maybe just not parked like an acceptable in an acceptable way that you could walk away from it
But more so in a way that feels like somebody is staking out, right?
So days after Jodie vanished without a trace,
the Mason City police held a press conference
that would fuel one of the most compelling mysteries
of the story.
They announced that they were searching
for a white Ford Econoline van,
likely from the mid 1980s,
so about 10 years old at this time,
that had been spotted in the vicinity of Jody's apartment complex early on the morning
She disappeared again. This is from that one witness. So now police are taking this seriously. They're thinking maybe this van is relevant
Let's see if somebody can call in a tip and say hey, I got a neighbor who has
White 40 conaline and he was being really weird that day. They're just trying to get some tips.
And actually several neighbors recalled seeing
a similar vehicle lingering in the area around this time.
And one witness even claimed to have seen the van driving off
shortly after the time of her suspected abduction.
Which is really interesting to me.
These are kind of a lot of tips from so early in the morning.
Yeah.
Like how many people are awake and watching, watching the streets at 4am?
This is so weird.
I guess somebody was.
Yeah, I guess multiple people were somehow.
Um, but even so nobody saw exactly what happened to Jodie.
So the presence of the van combined with witness statements
led authorities to believe that it may have belonged
to somebody who had been watching Jodie,
possibly stalking her and learning her routine
before making a move.
Obviously, as we know, Jodie was at the very least receiving
what she described as, quote, nasty and naughty phone calls.
And she was listed in the white pages.
So this could have been how a stalker possibly somebody who watched her on the
news could have found her home phone number and her address even down to her
apartment number, which is really, really scary.
Yeah.
I mean her apartment address and number and phone number were all listed in the white pages
So anybody could have found her that way
I don't know why I'm getting this feeling of like Terminator when he's like looking through the white pages trying to find the right
Sarah Connor, you know and he's like going down the list. Yeah, it just goes down the list goes to the first Sarah Connor
Are you Sarah Connor? But there's only one Jodie who's in true, right?
So it's like it would have been very easy for somebody to find her. Like I'm saying,
especially if they already knew who she was from the news, all they got to do is look
in the book and there she is. And I got to say the nasty and naughty phone calls where
I know you just brought up a movie reference. I'm about to do the same. We always do that.
We always do. It really reminds me so much of, I know you'll agree Heath, the original Black Christmas,
because you have to imagine this would have been
maybe crude or sexual in nature.
The phone calls would have been based on that description,
naughty and nasty.
Sure.
Which just gives you the idea of the depravity
that this person would have had to bother her like this?
And it makes you wonder, were they physically watching her as well?
Because it does seem like that was also the case as we're gonna get into in a minute.
But anyway, back to the van really quick.
So despite efforts to identify the driver or trace down the vehicle,
the alleged white 40 conoline van sadly remained a mystery in this investigation,
and police have not released whether or not there was a clear connection there.
Well, through July of 1995, the search for Jodie continued,
with her case being treated as an abduction, of course.
Helicopters continued circling in the early days of July around Mason City, and interviews continued to be conducted with possible suspects.
Within a month of Jody's disappearance, investigators had received more than 700 tips on the tip line, but none of them seemed to stick.
At this point, police had interviewed almost 800 people with no significant leads.
That's a lot of people, especially when you consider how small this city is.
Yeah, that's a lot of people.
Well, by the end of summer, ground searches were still being conducted, but,
disappointingly, those really didn't come up with anything either.
Now, as we can imagine, Jodie's family was completely devastated,
and they were very involved in the quest to find her.
The Hoos and Truths even hired a private investigator, and hopes that their extensive expertise would be beneficial to finding Jodie.
I mean, they even flew to Los Angeles to meet with three psychics and a televised special.
I mean, it really is clear that they were just trying anything that they could, but nothing helpful came from this. Jodie's case was also featured on several national
television shows, including America's Most Wanted and Unsolved Mysteries. And as shocking
as her disappearance was, those close to her really couldn't help but recollect a pre-reported
incident. So in October of 1994,
about nine months before she went missing,
Jodi had actually called the police to report an incident
where she believed she was being followed,
proving that this had been going on for a while.
She had been out for a jog one autumn morning
when she noticed a truck following her
and the driver staring at her.
Then when she started getting those unsolicited phone calls in the months leading up to her
disappearance, Jodie understandably had reason to be concerned, which police only learned
after she went missing.
But this only strengthened their belief that somebody snatched her.
It's reported that officials tried to trace the potential stalking calls, but sadly they
were unable to identify this caller.
Yeah, so she told many people in the final months of her life about these various stalking
incidents.
She told her family, she told her friends, she told the police, she told those random
golfers.
Like, a lot of people knew about this and she was trying to be proactive.
That's why she reported this situation to the police, which is why looking at her abduction,
it's really hard to believe that this would just be a random crime. You know, we think
about her walking out at 4 a.m. ish to go to work. What are the chances that there is
just some random person on the street and they take that?
Opportunity to abduct her and that it's a crime of opportunity that feels so unlikely
Yeah, it feels unlikely to me that this person would be in that that apartment complex area looking for a victim
I feel like if they're if they're cruising around at 4 a.m. Looking for a victim
It's probably not gonna be in a in a selective area
Like an apartment complex parking lot, you know what I mean? It might be on the street, but yeah
I I definitely think that this was I mean we'll get into our theories later
But I'm just gonna say right now this does not at all feel random or like a crime of opportunity
And I also want to say just kind of piggybacking on Heath's story just then about that being a pickup truck
that was following her.
We have no description of that really.
There's some reports say that it was a dark colored
pickup truck.
Others say that it was a white pickup truck.
So it doesn't seem like the description of this pickup truck
is very clear, but it wasn't a Ford Econoline.
So then you wonder, is this the same person?
Do they have two vehicles?
Is this a group of people?
Yeah. Does this person own that truck and maybe they use their work van to abduct Jodi?
Right. Exactly.
I mean, all we really know is that she was so spooked by this and everything that was happening
that she also asked for advice about if she should start carrying maze.
And you can imagine that she didn't know anybody with this pickup truck.
She didn't know who was driving since she did identify that the person was
staring at her.
So that means she got at least a decent look at them,
even if it had been brief.
So that would kind of tell us that this was a stranger,
but we don't have the description of the person or as it's clear from what I'm saying,
even a clear description of either vehicle.
But it does appear like these are two separate vehicles.
And again, it is important to note that Jodie was kind of a celebrity in Mason City.
And remember, it was a very small city of about 30,000 people.
And she was the face of the morning news.
So people very much knew who she was.
Her work schedule was known.
And like I mentioned earlier, her address was public in the phone book.
Now according to a local martial arts instructor in Mason City, Jodie had been taking self-defense
classes in the months before she vanished in response to her fears.
So this shows that Jodie had clearly not been feeling safe, and the stalker concern really
comes into play and it feels like it was only getting worse.
It started with somebody maybe physically following her and then calling her and harassing her over the
phone. Now during the investigation into Jodie's disappearance several people
were questioned like Heath said there were so many suspects in this case so
many people of interest but also people like her colleagues her friends her
neighbors were all interviewed but colleagues reported that Jodie had seemed fine and in good spirits leading up to her disappearance.
And no one noted any signs that she was in immediate danger or being threatened.
So whether this was because things had been a little slow lately or because she just wasn't sharing it with her colleagues, we can't be sure.
Yeah, and you don't often show everything in your personal life with your colleagues.
Maybe that's something you just don't want to get into.
Right.
She probably shared it with friends and family, but yeah,
I could see her not sharing it with colleagues.
Oh yeah, so true. But like I said earlier as well,
she sent that letter around this very time to her best friend,
explaining more about her stalking
situation and her friend didn't get it until after Jodie disappeared so we can
imagine she sent it maybe the day before she vanished ish right so it does seem
like around this time the stalking was still very much going on and she may have
known that something was coming something something was going to happen to her. Well, while countless individuals were questioned and interviewed,
a few names did stand out, capturing the public's attention and speculation.
First, a man named Tony DeJohn Jackson. He lived right there in Mason City,
Iowa during the time of Jodie's disappearance, and three
years after Jodie vanished, Tony was convicted of serial rape, and according to a jailhouse
informant, he admitted to killing Jodie.
The informant said that Tony told him he had murdered an anchor woman and recited a rap
with lyrics that might lead to where Jodie's
body could be found.
But of course, Tony denied this and no evidence at this point proves that he was connected.
Then three months after Jodie disappeared, a convicted sex offender who did not know
Jodie personally, named Thomas Corscaden, was questioned. At the time, nothing came
of it and he was cleared for suspicion due to lack of evidence. But years later, he made
a comment regarding Jodie during a psychological evaluation, saying that she was dead when
the evaluator expressed doubt that she was alive.
Yeah, so basically, during this evaluation, they bring up Mason City, Iowa
And they're kind of like what comes to mind when you think of Mason City and he smiles and says Jodie who's in truth?
So creepy. Yeah, and then they're saying oh, yeah, I don't think she's alive and he goes no
She's dead it felt very kind of final and Thomas's reaction and certainty along with those creepy ass smiles led to him being
re-examined.
So in 2004, 9 years after Jodie went missing, a search warrant was obtained for his home,
during which his daughter even admitted that her dad knew who Jodie was and watched her
on TV.
Unfortunately, aside from this, no further link was made, though it's known that when
she went missing, he was living about 45 minutes away in Austin, Minnesota.
But he did frequently travel to Iowa to work.
So like you're saying, did he have a work vehicle?
Was he following her like we're talking about with the stalker?
Very well could be.
So, or is this just a guy who watched her on the news and liked her and just had an opinion
on her disappearance case?
That could be as well.
You know, I mean, people like to get involved in cases and in investigations because it's
interesting, obviously.
Yeah, of course, especially if he was a fan of her news program.
Well, while it's possible that Tony or Thomas are behind Jodie's abduction and likely murder,
there's one man in particular that has landed in the center of Jodie's case.
Enter once again, John Van Sise.
As we know, John was a friend of Jodie's, and if you recall, he was the one that was
with her the night before she disappeared. They had spent the evening watching that birthday video at his home on Monday, June 26, 1995.
Investigators questioned him thoroughly due to the close nature of their relationship and his proximity to her in the days leading up to her vanishing.
Since they had also gone on that trip to that lake together.
vanishing since they had also gone on that trip to that lake together. So before we get into why he's been looked at so heavily, let's talk about who John
Vanceis is here.
At the time of Jodie's untimely disappearance, John was about 49 years old, whereas Jodie
was 27 years old.
Like I think Heath mentioned earlier, he was 22 years older.
Jodie moved into her apartment complex in November of 1993. And around that time, she crossed paths with John who lived there too.
The two became close friends and John said that they bonded over their similar
interests in, you know, like outdoor activities, boating, water skiing, stuff
like that. And as we mentioned, John owned a boat.
They were enjoying it that previous weekend.
But in an expression of his admiration for Jodie,
he named the boat after her.
That's pretty wild.
Yeah, it's really hard to figure this out
because like I said earlier,
it seems like he was really into their friendship
She's this beautiful young woman. She is
Adventurous she's sporty she loves to have fun. She's very serious about her career. She's passionate. She's on TV
She's she's kind of got it all but I can see this in kind of a interesting angle though
Because it's like if he really had all this admiration for Jodie, why would he want
her dead unless it was one of those situations where he just wanted to force
himself upon her and then something happened and it was an accident he had
to get rid of evidence or whatever but it really feels that's kind of an
interesting thing to me. If I can't have her, no one can, perhaps.
Just a thought.
You know, so a lot of people have just kind of looked at him sideways for various reasons.
Naming his boat after her.
You read that quote earlier about how he would give his clothes to her, like his t-shirts to her,
if she liked them after he wore them for a little while.
But he says, oh, well, I was like a father figure to her, like his t-shirts to her, if she liked them after he wore them for a little while.
But he says, oh, well, I was like a father figure to her.
And it just kind of makes you wonder if there was more interest there on his side.
She looks at him like this cool guy who she likes hanging out with and he's super fun
and they have a ton in common, but it's super platonic on her end.
But for him, like I said, she's got it all.
He has her attention and he wants
more.
Perhaps, we don't know.
But we do know that they spent quite a lot of time together.
One friend even asked Jodie if she and John had a secret romance, which Jodie adamantly
denied.
But again, many at least question John's intentions.
Even Jodie's sister believed that John had quite an infatuation with Jodie and that she
herself was aware of it.
Like Jodie knew that he was interested in her, but she didn't want him like that.
She just wanted her friend to stay her friend.
But even after Jodie disappeared, John insisted that they were nothing but friends.
He participated in a public interview with KIMT, the station where Jodie worked, and said,
quote, Jodie was like a daughter to me. She was just like my own child. And I do want to add,
John did have a son that Jodie knew as well, and he was with them on the lake the weekend earlier.
John was reportedly at home about five minutes away when Jodie vanished without a trace and this
would be a very difficult alibi to confirm with certainty because he said that he was alone but
his friend LaDonna recalled calling John at 6 a.m. so about an hour and a half-ish to two hours
after Jodie vanished, on his landline to confirm their usual routine morning walk, which he
allegedly answered and agreed to as usual.
So if this is true, and knowing what we do know about many killers calling out of work
the day they commit a horrific crime, it would
potentially be hard to believe that John would have agreed to go on this walk at all.
Maybe he would have said, I can't today.
But apparently he did go on this walk, and when the two met up around 7am, LaDonna says
that John seemed completely normal and showed no signs that anything was out of the ordinary.
But since there is really no evidence of this walk, many question its validity.
But I will say there really is no real reason to question it other than because of the fact
that it feels like a convenient alibi.
But that's mostly people who feel like John is probably responsible just based on all
of these notes. Yeah, I mean without any concrete evidence or physical evidence, there's really not a
whole lot there unless there's something that police haven't released to the public.
We don't know about that, but you know, it is possible, but I wouldn't go too far down
that rabbit hole.
Well then I think about the case we covered recently, murder at Carol Ann Chateau, and
how he was acting totally normally afterwards as well.
He showed up to things.
Yeah.
His sister said he wasn't acting strange at all, and that was only a couple hours after
the murder as well.
So, it doesn't mean that he's in the clear here.
But I will say that Mason City Police did confirm that John passed a polygraph test, though some reports claim that he did fail, and that he had willingly given his fingerprints and a palm print, so I guess there's that.
But it's hard because we also don't know if the partial palm print or even the hair found amongst her car belonged to her abductor.
That could have been a person putting their groceries in their own car next to hers the day before, and they touched her car, like, who knows?
It's too hard to say.
Well, not willing to give up on John just yet, shortly after Jodie disappeared, police turned their attention to John's home,
focusing specifically on his basement, but they found nothing of significance.
And then, John moved to Arizona and while this does kind of look suspicious to us when a person of interest
You know relocates shortly after the crime in question takes place
He later explained in an interview that the publicity surrounding him and locals knowledge of him being close to Jody
Led to him losing his job his home and his boat though We're not're not sure how that's true, but that's what he says at least.
He also says that he lost his dignity and his friends, so he moved to Phoenix to start
anew.
Though, even there, he continued to be questioned by police in relation to Jody's case. In February of 2017, as renewed investigations surrounding her
case were underway, investigators with the Mason City Police Department received
approval for a search warrant in order to place a GPS tracker on two of John's
vehicles. And the search warrant was granted to collect data for a 1999 Honda Civic and a 2013 GMC
SUV, which were both, of course, manufactured after Jody's disappearance.
Which obviously a lot of people questioned during that time, but despite efforts, Mason
City Police disclosed that no helpful information in Jody's case was
discovered as a result of that search warrant.
And what the search warrant revealed regarding, you know, the GPS trackers has remained sealed
for several years, until April of 2025, just a couple of weeks before the release of this
episode. The vehicles were monitored between March 2nd and March 6th of 2017, and it showed John
traveling from Baxter, Iowa and back to Phoenix where he lived, so that's kind of interesting.
And I know that this sounds so random to trace his movements over two decades after Jodie
went missing, and the full reasoning and findings are still sealed,
but it's believed that they think that he was meeting with somebody involved in the case thanks
to a new tip and a new lead. And considering that he drove to Iowa on this trip, we can assume police
learned about this trip ahead of time and were hoping to kind of catch him in the act or something.
I mean, it's not like he was going to Florida like Iowa is where Jodie lived and
Disappeared from to be fair. That's also where he used to live
So it's like he could have been you know going back to see an old friend or possibly a family member who knows absolutely
But of course as far as we know they didn't catch him in anything
Well less than two years later in
2019 John was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, which
seemed to close any remaining chance of clarity or confession.
And he left behind another unanswered chapter in the mystery of Jodie's fate when he died
in December of 2024.
And by the way, he passed away at 78. A private investigator named Steve Ridge, who joined the case back in 2019, recently
said that his suspect list has since been narrowed down to four people.
And he did not provide names, we don't know if John is even on his list, but he revealed
that Jodie had recently started dating a man who lived out of state.
P.I. Ridge said, quote,
I think, plain and simply, things came to a head given the fact that she had developed this new
relationship. I believe this was ultimately the motive of the confrontation that would have
occurred in the parking lot at her apartment. So he has reason to believe that the motive for abducting
and possibly killing Jodie was jealousy.
And I can definitely see that.
I mean, a lot of these guys that stalk women,
they get really, really possessive over those women.
And if they start dating a new guy,
it's like heartbreak for them.
It's like backstabbing to them.
But it's also hard because, are they like,
does Steve think that the ex-boyfriend is involved,
or that the stalker of hers was involved
and killed her out of jealousy that she was dating somebody?
That's kind of what I'm thinking.
I'm thinking that the stalker was jealous
that she was dating somebody and he couldn't have her.
It's so hard to say. I mean, again, it does seem like somebody,
a man could have very well been at her apartment that night. So was it a man?
But then I would, I don't know,
it's kind of would be surprising to me that there was a man in her apartment and
that police never released that obviously even her family has said that they
were worried about the
documents of 2017 being released by a judge recently because they want to keep the integrity
of the investigation. So it's possible they know way more than we know and can kind of dispute a
lot of this. And just being able to like narrow down a suspect list
to four people when we talked about the fact that
they interviewed, the police interviewed over 800 people,
I think that says a lot.
Well, despite clear signs of a struggle at the scene
back in June of 1995, the extensive searches for Jodie
have remained unsuccessful.
Six years later in May of 2001, Jodi's family declared her legally dead,
which was a painful but necessary step forward,
though the search for her has never stopped, even as we approach
30 years since her disappearance this June.
And really quick, I want to go back to the crime scene. We will post photos of her apartment complex so you can see the layout and just
how close the entrance is to where her car was. We said parking lot,
but it's a, it's a very small parking lot.
The cars are just outside of the door.
So something that interests me about the stalking angle versus somebody that she
knew angle is that
Especially considering it was so dark outside The Sun was not gonna start coming up for another hour and a half or so if someone was waiting outside for her
They'd have to have been really close to her car waiting to kind of jump out and grab her
Obviously to abscond her the way that they would have needed to
out and grab her, obviously to abscond her the way that they would have needed to.
Their own vehicle would have had to have been really right next to hers, possibly a van or a truck parked directly next to her or behind her car. But this person, if they knew her schedule,
would have been waiting over an hour past when she was supposed to come out to her car,
since she was running so late that day. Which just makes me wonder if it was someone who was in her apartment that night that followed her
out. Possibly the new person she was seeing or even John. But it's so hard to ignore the stalker
angle. We know that she had been followed for at least eight months. So was this just a creep who
was watching her,
maybe not wanting to act on anything just yet
until that very day?
And then did they finally decide
to do something to her that day?
And knowing her routine well,
they waited next to her car
and sprung out when she scurried out?
I think that it's very possible
that this person did in fact wait over an hour because if they were really set in their decision to take Jodie that morning,
I don't think anything was going to stop them, even if she slept in for an hour.
I think they were going to wait and they were just going to wait it out.
Well, only a few years into her flourishing career as a news broadcaster, Jodie had big ambitions in her life.
At 27 years old, Jodie had an admirable work ethic
and if she had been given the chance,
she likely would have become a widely known star
and excelled as a famous national news anchor.
As of 2025, it has now been 30 years
since Jodie Housentroot vanished from the parking lot of her apartment complex in Mason City, Iowa.
Regardless of the years gone by, Mason City Police Chief Jeff Brinkley says the case remains open and active.
In an interview, Chief Brinkley said, quote, It's never been a cold case for us.
It's been an active investigation since it happened.
Refusing to give up,
Chief Brinkley remains hopeful that she will one day be found.
So if you have any information about Jody's case,
please call the Mason City Police Department at 641-421-3636.
You can also find important contact information at FindJodie.com. Thank you so much everybody for listening to this episode of Going West.
Yes, thank you guys so much for listening to this episode.
I find it so wild that we have this the drag marks in the in the parking lot.
We have information that leads us to believe that Jodie was abducted.
But other than that, there is absolutely nothing And it feels like this whole case is just rife with speculation.
But somebody does know something.
Somebody was responsible.
And hopefully someday we will have those answers.
I really wonder how close police are, if they really do know a lot more than we know.
Obviously, they know that she had started dating somebody before she went missing. I'm assuming they have that person's name. I'm assuming they've interviewed
them. But I wonder how close or far they really are.
Well, I surely hope that they are really close because, I mean, it's been 30 years since
Jodie vanished and her family is still fighting for answers.
And it's such a perplexing case. There's so much to discuss regarding her stalker
and all the different people in her life.
And just the fact that she was a figure on TV.
She was a morning news reporter
that people watched every single day.
There's so many people that watch the news every morning.
They're comfortable with their local house.
And Jodie was one of those people. So was this somebody who was a fan and they were watching her or was
it somebody she knew or somebody else? I really hope that her family can get answers someday
and that we can figure out what really happened to her.
Well, just like Daphne said, make sure you go and check out those photos of today's case
on our socials. We're on Instagram at going West podcast,
and we're also on Facebook. Thank you everybody for tuning in. Also huge
thank you to all the people that recommended this case. We've been wanting to cover this
again for so long. So glad we finally did. And we will see you again on Friday.
All right guys. So for everybody out there in the world. Don't be a stranger. you