In The Dark - S1 E2: The Circle
Episode Date: September 7, 2016When Jacob Wetterling was taken, authorities launched what would turn into one of the largest searches for any missing person in the history of the United States. But that first night, law en...forcement didn't cover all the basics. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
Transcript
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If this is your first time listening to In the Dark, stop, go back, and start at the first episode.
It'll make a lot more sense.
Last time, on In the Dark. When you ran, did you look back? Yeah, once we got way down there. What did you see?
Nothing.
He wasn't there anymore.
The 11-year-old boy went missing in 1989, and it has been a mystery since.
Finally, we know.
We know what the Wetterling family and all of Minnesota have longed to know since that awful night in 1989.
We know the truth.
Are there things you would have done differently now looking back on it?
You always think about that, but no, I think the people that worked on that case
gave truly 110% every day they were there.
And I don't know.
I don't know that there's anything we could have done differently.
We are here today because of the perseverance of the investigative team, the commitment to aggressively follow up on every
single lead, no matter how small or seemingly insignificant, and the absolute belief that if
we continue to press, we would eventually solve this case. Listen
Can you hear the sound
Of hearts beating
All the world around
Five days after 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling was abducted,
radio stations across Minnesota all played one of Jacob's favorite songs,
Listen, by Red Grammar, along with a message for Jacob from his mom, Patty.
I just want Jacob to know that this song is for him to hear.
The heartbeat of humanity is beating for him.
I know it will give him strength.
And if there's an ounce of compassion in the man who is holding him,
he will let him go safely.
Listen, Jacob, can you hear our prayers?
We love you.
Radio station employees and passersby joined in holding hands.
Some in the media were even crying.
The emotions are growing with the search right now.
I'm hoping that he would know that we're all still looking for him, that we didn't give up.
The people in the town of St. Joseph seemed driven by the belief that by brute force of will,
they could bring Jacob back.
They made flyers with Jacob's photo and put them everywhere,
on telephone poles and shop windows, on doors and parked cars.
Everywhere you went, you'd see people with white ribbons pinned to their shirts
to symbolize hope for Jacob.
Thousands of people even lined up in a human chain,
shivering in the cold and crying.
The chain began on the main highway just near the Delwent ballroom. The
chain stretched for three miles. 3,500 school children were bussed in. Even two baseball players
from the Minnesota Twins showed up, wearing blue warm-up jackets embroidered with Jacob's initials.
People of all ages and walks of life came out to keep the hope alive,
hope that 11-year-old Jacob will return home safely.
Listen, can you hear the sound?
Jacob's abduction fell neatly into two typical television news narratives,
small town pulling together and heroic investigators doing all they can.
Police and volunteers in the sky and on the ground hunt frantically for a little boy kidnapped at gunpoint.
Within days, dozens of law enforcement officers started arriving in town.
Search teams are combing the area just west of St. Cloud for any trace of the 11-year-old boy.
By the end of the week, there were almost 100 officers working the case.
They came from all over.
almost 100 officers working the case. They came from all over. There were sheriff's deputies,
FBI agents, state investigators, and local officers from across Minnesota.
The governor even called out the National Guard.
Five helicopters scanned a 30-square-mile area while searchers below combed the area on foot without finding a trace.
Searchers were working 18-hour days.
Search crews, helicopters, and bloodhounds could not find any clue as to Jacob
Wetterling's whereabouts today, but his family has not given up hope. This search was massive.
It was unlike anything Minnesota had seen before. In fact, it was one of the largest searches for
any single missing person in the history of the United States. People just assumed every square
inch of the region had been scoured,
and every person who might have seen something had been interviewed. But that wasn't true.
This is In the Dark, an investigative podcast from APM Reports. In this series, we're looking at
what went wrong in the case of Jacob Wetterling, an 11-year-old who was kidnapped in central
Minnesota in 1989 and whose remains were found just last week. Today, we're going to take a
closer look at what happened the night Jacob was kidnapped. We're going to find out how the decisions of law enforcement in those critical first few hours would allow the man who
took Jacob to get away unpunished for 27 years.
Just today, a man named Danny Heinrich appeared in a Minneapolis courtroom.
I was there, along with what seemed like every other reporter in Minnesota.
There were so many people, I couldn't even get into the main courtroom.
So I went into one of the two overflow rooms to watch on a video feed.
And pretty soon, those rooms filled up too.
Danny Heinrich came into the courtroom, wearing a light-colored shirt and dark pants. He's a short guy, 5'5", stocky,
with white hair. He walked up to face the judge, with an attorney on either side,
and stood with his back to us. We all leaned in to make sure we heard what happened next.
in to make sure we heard what happened next. The federal prosecutor asked the question.
On October 22, 1989, did you kidnap, sexually assault, and murder Jacob Wetterling?
Yes, I did, Heinrich said. A loud gasp went through the courtroom, so loud it was picked up on the video feed. Finally, there would be answers to the most notorious crime in Minnesota history.
The way the kidnapping of 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling was always talked about was as a
kind of epic mystery, that there was this heroic law enforcement effort, but somehow the man who
took Jacob slipped through their fingers. There was nothing else they could have done. Jacob just vanished.
And then Danny Heinrich began to describe what actually happened.
He seemed resigned to it, like he was forcing himself to get through it.
He sighed a lot.
Heinrich told the judge that on the night of October 22, 1989,
for reasons he didn't explain,
he got in his car, a blue 1982 Ford EXP,
and drove half an hour from his apartment
in the small town of Painesville to St. Joseph.
Inside his car was a scanner he used
to pick up police dispatch and a.38 revolver.
Sometime after 8 p.m., Heinrich turned onto the dead-end
road that led to the Wetterlings' house. He saw three kids biking up toward town.
He parked his blue Ford in a long gravel driveway, across from a cornfield. And then he waited.
When the boys biked back, Heinrich got out of his car, put on a mask, and walked onto the road.
He ordered the boys into the ditch and grabbed Jacob.
Heinrich took Jacob back to his car, handcuffed him, and put him in the front passenger seat.
Heinrich said Jacob asked him a question.
What did I do wrong?
said, Jacob asked him a question. What did I do wrong? Heinrich drove Jacob around for a while,
long enough that he started to hear police activity on a scanner. He told Jacob to lean forward in the seat and duck down so no one would see him. Once they made it out of the
town of St. Joseph, Heinrich told Jacob he could sit back up. He kept driving around for a long time. Eventually, he took Jacob back to his
own town, Painesville, about 25 miles from where he'd kidnapped Jacob. He pulled off onto a side
road near a gravel pit. Heinrich took the handcuffs off Jacob and walked him over to a row of trees.
He told Jacob to take off his clothes.
Heinrich also undressed.
He touched Jacob and had Jacob touch him.
Then he told Jacob to masturbate in front of him.
The assault went on for about 20 minutes.
And then Jacob told Heinrich that he was cold.
So Heinrich told him he could get dressed.
Jacob asked Heinrich to take him home, and
Heinrich said he couldn't, and Jacob started to cry. Heinrich told him to stop.
I noticed that Heinrich seemed to have trouble telling this part of the story in the courtroom.
It sounded like he had trouble breathing, like it was hard to get the words out.
Heinrich said he saw a patrol car come down the
road and he panicked. He loaded his gun and shot and killed Jacob. Then Heinrich got in his blue
car, left Jacob's body, and drove home. He spent a couple hours at his apartment, then he headed
back out on foot carrying a shovel and walked a little over a mile back to where Jacob's body was.
He started digging a hole, but his shovel was too small.
So he walked over to a construction company close by and stole a bobcat.
He started it up and turned the lights on and drove it back to the site.
By then, it was sometime after midnight, at least three hours since Jacob had been kidnapped.
Heinrich used the bobcat to dig the grave, and he put Jacob in it and filled it in.
Heinrich returned the bobcat and then came back to the grave and tried to cover it up a bit more with grass and brush.
Then he realized he'd forgotten to bury Jacob's shoes.
So he walked for a few minutes down the road and threw them into a ravine.
And then Heinrich walked home.
It was one of the worst stories I've ever heard told in a courtroom.
Even some veteran reporters were crying.
Heinrich's story was awful.
But it wasn't just his brutality that shocked me.
This did not seem like a perfect crime, not by a long shot.
It involved hours of driving, of walking down a main road carrying a shovel,
stealing a bobcat in the middle of the
night with the lights on to dig a grave. All of this in the first few critical hours of what had
always been described as a massive and thorough investigation. I wanted to know what law
enforcement should have been doing in those critical first few hours.
To find out, I needed to start with the basics, Policing 101.
So I reached out to a guy named Patrick Zerpoli to help me understand how an investigation like this is supposed to go.
Zerpoli is one of the top consultants in the country on child abduction cases.
He used to coordinate the Amber Alert program in Pennsylvania. Sir Polly told me there are two things you need to do right
away when you arrive at a crime scene. They're both pretty basic. First, secure the scene. Then,
and this is the one he stressed the most, talk to the neighbors. So we always say, you know, start
close and work your way out.
You know, start from their home, start doing interviews, knocking on doors.
And we always tell people, you want to interview over and over and over.
You want to interview people multiple times, not just one time.
You know, if a case drags on for more than a day and goes into second and third day,
you want to re-interview everyone again.
I called a couple of other experts to confirm that this immediate,
repeated interviewing of neighbors is standard procedure.
I talked to a man named Vernon Geberth.
He trains law enforcement officers all over the country.
He's one of the best-known trainers in the U.S.
He's also worked in the New York Police Department
as a lieutenant in a homicide unit in the Bronx. I have taught over 72,000 people the art and science of homicide since 1980.
Author of Practical Homicide Investigation, Considered the Bible.
Author of Sex-Related Homicide and Death Investigation.
Author of Autorotic Death Investigation.
Author of the Checklist and Field Guide, 1st and third first and second edition etc which proves
I have no life. Geberth didn't want to comment specifically on this case because he hasn't seen
the investigative file but he told me it's hard to overstate how important it is to talk to the
neighbors. I can tell you that every major case that I was in charge of in the city of New York
that resulted in a successful conclusion was based on a good neighborhood canvas where people were asked to report anything, even though they
didn't think it was important. It turned out to be important. Goebbels says these people who don't
realize they've seen something important are called unknowing witnesses. Yeah, the unknowing witnesses
is a term that we use when we do a canvas of the area where the event has taken place.
And you never ask someone, did you see anything strange?
You ask them, did you see anything?
Okay, I see a guy sticking a mic in my mouth right now.
Okay, that unknown witness, that piece of information could be paramount to the investigation.
And like what would be an example of something that people just don't pick up on as important?
Somebody walking down the street parking a car.
Why would that be important?
Well, it would be important if later on that car was parked at the same time the murder took place.
Right.
How soon do you start talking to other people?
Immediately.
Immediately.
Immediately.
Well, because time's your biggest enemy in an investigation.
People have short memories. They don't remember everything correctly.
You've got to get out there and talk to people and find out what the hell's going on.
You have to reconstruct the time and the events going back, the dynamics of what was taking place in that area at the time.
How long have law enforcement known about the basic techniques for solving cases?
Probably forever.
Sherlock Holmes?
Yeah, okay.
So, knock on doors, talk to everyone, and do it right away.
Basic stuff.
And the agency that was responsible for doing this in the Jacob Wetterling case was the Stearns County Sheriff's Office.
Here's how the investigation worked.
The Stearns County Sheriff was in charge.
It was sheriff's deputies who were on the scene that night.
They were the ones at the Wetterling's house and the ones who organized all that searching that night.
The sheriff did ask for help from the FBI and other agencies,
and they arrived the next morning.
But the sheriff stayed in charge of the investigation.
So I started calling some of the investigators from back then
to ask them whether the sheriff and his deputies
had done this policing 101 stuff,
knocking on doors, asking people what they saw.
And everyone was kind of dismissive when I asked them about this. Like, of course we did that. Here's retired FBI agent Al Garber. I'm not sure,
but I would assume yes. Detectives ask those questions. And Jeff Jamar, also from the FBI.
I think the neighborhood was looked at very quickly and very broadly. And former Stearns
County detective Steve Mund.
But no one I talked to actually remembered going around and knocking on doors that night.
That seemed a little odd.
So I asked another reporter I work with, Curtis Gilbert,
to call everyone he could find who'd lived on the dead-end road that Jacob, Trevor, and Aaron would have biked along the night of October 22, 1989, and ask them a simple question.
When did law enforcement first talk to you?
Curtis.
We're recording?
Oh, okay.
So you're here to give me the latest?
I can give you the breakdown. I actually did. I made it even like a little chart. Curtis managed to dig up some old city directories at
a local archive, and he used those to figure out who lived on the dead-end street the boys biked
down on October 22nd, 1989. It was nearly a hundred people. Some of them have since died,
but Curtis tried to find as many as he could. He was able to reach 26.
Let me pull up my spreadsheet.
I called this when they were first interviewed by police.
So did law enforcement talk to everybody in the neighborhood that night?
That night?
No way.
Do you want to?
I brought a little tape because I thought there'd be there's a few interesting things.
Yeah, that'd be great.
Curtis played me some audio from the people he talked to.
And keep in mind, it's been 27 years, so some people's memories aren't great.
We didn't hear anything, you know.
Isn't that weird?
But they didn't really, they didn't come to the door that night.
Oh, about two or three weeks later, the FBI came in.
They knocked on their door.
But it was a couple weeks, and they interviewed.
Did the police ever come knocking at your door since you lived in the neighborhood?
Did you ever have to talk to the cops about it?
No.
No, they never did.
They never did.
Okay.
Okay.
the cops about it?
No.
No, they never did.
They never did.
Okay.
Okay, so people who are sure they were talked to that night
of the 26, two.
Two people were sure
they were talked to that night.
Remember, we're not talking about
everyone on the dead end road.
Just the 26 people
Curtis was able to reach.
Four people thought
they were talked to the next day or maybe it was that night?
So two people for sure that night,
and then another four people who think they were talked to the next day,
but say it's possible it was really the first night.
So giving law enforcement the benefit of the doubt,
that's six people on the dead-end road who were talked to by law enforcement that night out of the people Curtis talked to.
As for the rest of the people, some of them said they weren't interviewed at all.
Some said they were talked to the next day.
Others say they were eventually interviewed a few days or even a few weeks later, but not by local law enforcement.
They remember being interviewed by the FBI
because it kind of creeped them out.
It was two agents.
Everyone said they were talked to by two agents.
Multiple people described those interviews this way.
There's two agents there.
One of them asks you the questions
and the other one just watches you.
Watches your facial expressions.
That's multiple people described it exactly in those terms.
So did law enforcement talk to everyone in the neighborhood that night?
No.
Did they go back to all the people they did interview
and talk to them over and over like the experts say you should?
No.
And this failure to canvas the neighborhood thoroughly that night was a big deal. It meant that law enforcement didn't get all the
information right away when it was most important, in those critical first few hours. Those hours
matter because most of the time, if a child is going to be killed by an abductor, it happens
in the first five hours. You can't go back the next day and just redo the investigation.
Most of the time, it's too late.
When I had pictured the kidnapping of Jacob Wetterling, I focused on the isolation.
That it didn't matter if anyone talked to the neighbors, because no one in the neighborhood saw anything anyway.
The boys were alone on that bike ride home.
The street was deserted.
It was just the three boys, Jacob, Aaron, and Trevor.
And the abductor, waiting for them in the dark.
But that's not at all what was going on that night.
It turns out that the whole way people have been picturing this crime is just wrong.
Lots of people saw them.
Wait, what?
Yeah, lots of people saw them coming.
Are you serious?
Yeah, people were out and kids were out.
And I talked to multiple families who saw them coming and going.
Do you remember where you were when you first heard about the abduction?
Well, actually, I heard the boys going by me.
Curtis talked to one guy named Jim Klein.
In 1989, he lived on the Dead End Road, a bit closer to town.
And on the evening of October 22nd, he was out in his garage working on a car.
Yeah, they were just walking.
They were coming back from the convenience store or whatever
and just walked right outside my garage.
I just happened to be walking outside right while they were going by and, you know, recognized
who it was, but that was about it.
Crazy.
So you probably saw them like around 9 o'clock that night or something, right?
Yep.
Wow.
So you were probably like one of the last people to see them.
Yeah, possibly, yeah.
Wow.
Jim Klein says he wasn't talked to by law enforcement
until a week or two later. And he actually wasn't the last person to see the boys that night.
We were outside. And him and I were the only two out there. Maybe the other kids had gone in.
That's how late it got in. And we talked to him just briefly. I talked to a brother and sister
named Adam and Erica Sundquist,
who lived very close to the abduction site, about a two-minute walk down the road.
They were 12 and 9 at the time, and that night,
they were out playing what everyone on the block just called night games.
Kick the can, ghosts in the graveyard, just weird games we came up with.
I remember Kick the Can was the most popular.
Do you remember what we
were doing? We were throwing corn in the air. We had corn from the field. We were shelling it and
throwing it in the air. So Adam and Erica are out in their yard throwing corn and they see Jacob and
Trevor and Aaron on their way back from the Tom Thumb. They say the boys were going pretty slow.
They even threw some corn at them as a joke.
It was literally within a minute that they biked by our house
that they were stopped up that hill.
It was within a minute.
Because it only takes about a minute to bike that distance, right?
Yeah, a minute or two.
Which was kind of spooky.
A few minutes after the boys passed their house,
Erica and Adam remember seeing a burgundy car, Which was kind of spooky. A few minutes after the boys passed their house,
Erica and Adam remember seeing a burgundy car,
the kind of jacked-up back, drive past,
heading south on the road in the same direction as the boys.
He's going up the hill towards where they went, past us. I mean, there was no road to turn off.
It's like once you got down the hill, there was two cul-de-sacs,
and then you had to come back through.
Yeah, there was no exit that way.
You had to come back by our house to get out, you know, from back there.
Right.
Then we went in the house, so we never seen anyone drive back through.
Erica and Adam say they don't remember any law enforcement officers knocking on their door that night.
They don't remember ever talking to investigators, but they assume they must have at some point.
I do know their story matches what they were saying back then,
because I found a 15-second interview they did with a local TV news reporter back in 1989,
just a day or so after Jacob was abducted.
back in 1989, just a day or so after Jacob was abducted.
They were going that way,
and then we seen a car go really fast go by here,
and he was going the same way.
I wasn't sure how seriously investigators would take this kind of information from a couple of kids.
Is this the sort of thing that you'd elevate or just shrug off?
Because, you know, 10-year-olds.
But Patrick Zerpoli, the child abduction expert, told me that not only should you take these kinds of stories seriously,
you should actually seek them out because kids notice things adults don't.
I've always said you want to look for that person who not the parents think is odd,
but other children in the neighborhood may say that this person is odd.
You know, he has been at the
school bus before, the school bus stop before. He has talked to us in the park. Those are those
individuals that you want to start looking for immediately because, you know, if they're in that
area, you know, you want to identify them, identify their whereabouts as soon as you can.
Some of the neighbors who live the closest to the abduction site suspected back then
that something was off about the investigation. Some of the reasons they felt that way are
striking, and frankly, in some cases, a little strange. Let me tell you about a family called
the Klaupockies. They lived on the dead-end road, and their story about how they first
encountered the investigators starts out in a kind of odd and kind of dark way. Curtis played me part of the conversation They had to get that fixed. They went home. They went to bed. The next day, lots of police cars and media swarming the neighborhood and their dog got hit by a car. So he had. So Jerry Klopaki had his neighbor with him, and he described burying the dog in their backyard.
And my neighbor, my next-door neighbor was with, and I had just tilled up my garden,
and I thought that's probably a good place to bury the dog.
And so I remember at night, we're out there, I'm'm digging this hole putting my dog in it and then
covering it up yeah i told my neighbor i said i said you're my witness this is my dog down here
because i was convinced that you know it's a fresh grave basically you know dirt dug up
and uh they just had a ton of people doing a search in the woods behind our house. They were within probably 15 feet of my garden, and I was a little surprised that they didn't catch that.
And if they missed that, you know, what else did they miss?
You know, that's what I thought at the time.
Jerry Klaupake told Curtis the person he should really talk to is his son Adam.
Could you just introduce yourself or say your name so I can make sure you're being
recorded okay? Yeah, my name is Adam Kropocki. And how old are you, Adam? I am now 41. Back in 1989,
Adam was 14. He was friends with Jacob Wetterling. He would go over to the Wetterling's house for
sleepovers, and people in the neighborhood would even talk about how the boys looked alike.
Adam said, first of all, there were other weird things that had happened on that dead-end road,
including this one thing that happened about five or six years before Jacob was kidnapped.
Adam and some other kids were playing kickball out in the yard.
It was around dusk. And somebody kicked the ball over the hedge and it ended up going over the road down in their ditch.
So I remember jumping through the hedge, running across the road to go grab the ball.
I grabbed the ball, and as I'm grabbing it, somebody picked me up.
I couldn't see their face because I had my back to them.
They had me in a bear hug or a bear hole or whatever. And the person had glasses.
I remember that. It was kind of a dark, raspy voice.
And as he's holding me up, and he holds me
pretty tight, my sister had opened the door
and yelled for us that I needed to come in.
And the guy says to me, you're lucky your sister called you.
And he threw me down, and I never saw him.
Adam told Curtis he remembers telling his dad, but they didn't call the police.
A few years pass, and then another strange thing happens to Adam.
On that same dead-end road
in 1989, just a month or two before Jacob was kidnapped.
A couple of months before the abduction, he and his friend Brandon had been walking back
from the Tom Thumb.
I was 14 at the time.
Brandon was 12.
We would go down to the Tom Thumb every night, practically.
We did that quite a bit that summer.
And it was dark.
It was after 10 o'clock at night.
And they were chased by a car down that same road.
The dead end road, where just a month or two later,
a man would grab Jacob and put him in his car.
And so they jump into the ditch.
He was right, he was real close, right behind us.
And so we just hit the ditch.
And by then he was like right there.
And they're freaked out and they run to Brandon's house,
which is like three doors down from the Klopockys.
The boys ran into Brandon's parents' garage.
So we just went as fast as we could into his garage and the car pulled into his driveway and then backed up.
And then he just put it in park and put on his brakes.
And he just shined it on us.
And they say they sort of have a staring contest with this car and the guy in the car for what Adam describes as a couple minutes.
What?
And then they run inside.
Did they see who the person was in the car?
Yes.
Did they recognize him?
No.
And what did they think this person was doing?
Being creepy.
Okay, but to get back to this, so what kind of car was it?
It was a blue car.
A blue car?
Yes.
Not just any blue car.
My friend's mother had a Pontiac 6000, and we compared it to that. I think we said it was a blue car
that looked similar to a Pontiac 6000. A blue Pontiac 6000. Here's what stopped me short about
that. The car that Danny Heinrich was driving, the night he kidnapped Jacob, was a blue Ford EXP.
But that car, that blue Ford, looks a whole lot like a Pontiac 6000. Both are
kind of boxy, low to the ground. It would be easy to mistake one car for the other.
Adam and his dad say no one came and knocked on their door the night Jacob was kidnapped.
No one came by that night to ask if they'd seen anything.
No one asked Adam that night if he'd ever seen anyone creepy in the neighborhood.
I remember waking up the next morning,
because we didn't even know what had happened that night.
And the dogs were barking in my bedroom window.
And with the police going through our yard and everything like that,
that's how I woke up.
Adam said still no one from law enforcement came to him,
asking if he saw anything.
So he asked his dad to drive him to the command center a few days later.
And Adam said both he and his friend Brandon
described the car to investigators.
Adam said he told the same story to the FBI a few days later.
The authorities never spoke to me again after the FBI came to our house,
and I kind of forgot about it.
He's never asked to look at any pictures?
You know, I kind of thought that maybe they would press me a little more
and maybe ask me some more questions about it.
Who knows, maybe even try to hypnotize me or something like that. But, you know, I said I'd
do anything to help and they didn't want to have anything to do with it.
Years passed, but Adam couldn't get this story out of his mind.
Maybe the guy in the car was the same guy who'd kidnapped Jacob.
Certainly seemed similar.
Same road, a couple of kids.
Adam even looked like Jacob.
Okay, so in 2004, Adam Klopocki takes the day off of work to go talk to the sheriff again.
He wants to tell the story again. You know,
he doesn't remember it nearly as well. You know, it's 15 years later. But and he offers to take them on a drive through the neighborhood. I'll show you where this happened and where we were
chased from and the route we would always take to go to the Tom Thumb. And he said that the police
did not seem or the sheriff's detective, who was the same detective who had interviewed him 15 years earlier, he didn't seem interested.
I remember just leaving out of there just so angry because they weren't listening to anything that I had to say.
Adam said for a long time he figured the reason that investigators didn't seem interested was because maybe his details back then weren't great.
Maybe his account was totally different
from his friend Brandon's.
Maybe the whole thing was so vague
that it was just useless.
But about a year ago, Adam got curious
and asked a sheriff's deputy
if he could look at his old statement,
that statement he gave to law enforcement as a kid.
When I got the transcripts, my jaw dropped because I don't remember being
able to identify the guy. That blew me away. But I, again, I thought my friend and I had
disagreed upon the color of the car and that's why it was never brought up again. But that wasn't
the case. We did agree on the color of the car.
And we did agree on the description of the man.
Shorter hair, kind of a stocky build.
There were probably a few other details that I don't remember,
but we both said that we could identify him in a lineup.
And, of course, then you wonder, OK, lineups aren't great, but you do wonder if they had put a bunch of photos in front of this, these two kids in separate rooms in October of 1989, what they would have said.
Yeah, we'll never know.
And the whole time long, you know, you got two guys, a quarter of a mile from the abduction site,
that could possibly have identified him, and we're never asked.
You know, like it totally slipped through the thing.
Adam wasn't the first person to tell law enforcement about a creepy man in a blue car.
Nine months before Jacob was kidnapped,
there was another kid in the same county
who was walking on a road one night
when a man pulled up in a blue car and grabbed him.
Next time on In the Dark.
New evidence tonight leads the FBI to believe
that Jacob Wetterling's kidnapper may have struck before.
How many of these types of psychopathic pedophiles can exist in this 15 to 20 mile radius?
I mean, was it more than one? Was there something bigger going on?
If they ever come close to finding me, I'll find you and kill you.
Yeah.
There was a fear of God that was put into all of us,
and that worry and that fear and that stress,
it just kind of festered and grew like a sliver.
If you get a sliver in your finger,
if you don't remove the sliver, it festers and it grows,
and it just infects the wound.
If you don't remove the sliver, it festers and it grows and it just infects the wound.
Nobody's ever asked me a single question about this other than you guys.
I've never been interviewed by police.
I've never been talked to by any law enforcement, ever.
Not one person. Thank you. Havik and Tom Scheck. Our theme music was composed by Gary Meister. Go to inthedarkpodcast.org to read more about Danny Heinrich and to watch a video of Patti Wetterling talking about the
search for Jacob and to listen to audio from Curtis's interviews with the neighbors.
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