The Deck - Donna Ingersoll (10 of Clubs, Minnesota)
Episode Date: December 14, 2022Our card this week is Donna Ingersoll, the 10 of Clubs from Minnesota. On a snowy December night in 1990, 25-year-old Donna Ingersoll stormed outside and disappeared into the night after a heated arg...ument with her boyfriend, leaving behind several important belongings and a twisted web of mysteries investigators have spent decades trying to untangle.For more than 30 years, Donna’s disappearance has weighed on the small town of Wabasha, Minnesota, as the passage of time has produced more questions than answers. But some recent developments have present-day investigators questioning everything they thought they knew about the case — and believing they’re closer than ever to cracking it.Donna is 4’11” and 106 lbs. She has blonde hair and green or hazel eyes and was last seen wearing boots and blue jeans. She would be 57 years old today. If you have any information about the 1990 disappearance of Donna Ingersoll, please contact Chief Deputy Jim Warren at the Wabasha County Sheriff’s Office at 651-565-3361 or email him at jwarren@co.wabasha.mn.us. To learn more about The Deck, visit www.thedeckpodcast.com. To apply for the Cold Case Playing Cards grant through Season of Justice, visit www.seasonofjustice.orgFollow The Deck on social media and join Ashley’s community by texting (317) 733-7485 to stay up to date on what's new!
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Our card this week is Donna Ingersol, the 10 of clubs from Minnesota.
On a snowy December night in 1990, 25-year-old Donna stormed outside and disappeared into the
night after a heated argument with her boyfriend, leaving behind several important belongings
and a twisted web of mysteries that investigators have spent decades trying to untangle.
But some recent developments have present day
investigators questioning everything they
thought they knew about the case and believing
that they're closer than ever to cracking it.
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is The Deck. It was 2012 and Jim Warren had just been appointed police chief of Wabasha, a rural Minnesota
city hugging the Mississippi River and the Wisconsin border.
It's a tiny community like population 2500, ripe with small town charm where everyone
knows each other.
And aside from some issues with drug crimes and petty theft, not much ever goes wrong,
except for one cold night in 1990 when one of its residents vanished without a trace.
The woman's name was Donna, and her case had been haunting Chief Warren for years.
He actually reviewed the case back when he was a detective in 2006, helping the then-police
Chief get Donna's story on social media.
And the details of her case stuck with him.
So much so that now that he was chief, one of his first priorities was doing
everything he could to warm up Donna's hopelessly cold case. But before making any investigative
steps, chief Warren wanted to form a cold case board to go over the two decades worth of records
and documents with a fine tooth comb. Not only to familiarize themselves with the case, but also
to see if the initial
investigators missed anything, or if there was something they could poke holes in. This
was the timeline that they sorted out.
Right around 11.45 pm, on December 16, 1990, the Wabusha County Sheriff's Office got
a call from a 33-year-old man named Gary Murphy, who said that his girlfriend
Donna was missing.
He said that they'd gotten into an argument an hour or so prior during a get-together
at a friend's house in downtown Wabishock.
He said that she got so mad that she stormed outside into the cold and snow leaving behind
her car and purse, and she hadn't come back.
Police reports didn't make it seem like there was a sense of urgency about her disappearance yet.
After all, Donna was 25 years old.
She could simply not return after an argument if she wanted to.
She foreign told our reporting team that since Gary didn't mention anything about finding signs of foul play,
authorities probably wanted to wait it out and to see if she would come back.
Back then it was common if you called in and said,
hey, we have someone missing.
Well, technically if you're an adult, you can be missing.
And it's on how the collar states
what kind of issues they're dealing with.
But Gary ended up calling again,
about 15 minutes later around midnight.
And this time a deputy responded to the friend's house to see if they
could find any signs of foul play or anything worrisome. Just like Gary had said, they found Donna's
car sitting in the driveway, her purse still inside of it. But those weren't the only things that Donna
had left behind. Gary also handed the deputy a lens that he said was from Donna's eye glasses, like just one lens.
The deputy asked Gary why just the one lens and Gary said it must have fallen out.
And right away this probably should have been pretty concerning because it either meant that Donna
was out in the freezing snowy night without full use of her glasses or maybe without them entirely.
And I know that she probably wouldn't want to be far away from them for too long. I think
she could make out objects and stuff like that and she could make her way, but I mean she could
still see but not well.
Now I don't know how glasses worked in 1990, but to me this is also a sign that maybe something
bad happens. Like I don't see lenses just falling out randomly.
But for some reason, the fact that there was only one lens, and the fact that many of
Donna's most important belongings were left behind didn't raise any red flags for the
deputy.
He seemed to think that Donna was probably fine and would just return on her own.
But night turned to morning and still there was no sign of her.
So Gary called the Sheriff's office yet again.
But police reports from the time make it seem like authorities still wanted to wait it
out a little bit longer before launching an investigation.
Even as Monday faded into Tuesday, many people still weren't too concerned.
They figured she'd just gone to one of the nearby stores or a downtown bar.
But there might actually be a possible reason that so many people, including law enforcement,
thought this.
It was known that she'd do that.
Even family members said there's times where she'd get mad and you wouldn't hear for her for a day or two.
She dropped off the map basically for a day or two of she was mad.
I did read down the reports. I think one time I read that there was...
she had gotten an argument and went on and hung out with some friends near the airport and then came back and everything was fine.
And she had a history of that as well. And I can only speculate being me
back then with the same technologies in the same way you respond to calls.
That's what their thought would have been because she had done this before. And you never want
to rush into something, especially if you're a adult. You have every right to go anywhere you'd like.
But there was no caveat to this. But Tuesday went by with no word from Donna.
So by the time Wednesday the 19th rolled around, authorities and Donna's loved ones made
the call to file a report and have Donna officially labeled a missing person.
With that, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension got involved.
Now, in a lot of cases that I've talked about like Dale Williams, Darwin Vest, and Shelton
Sanders, once the missing person's report is officially filed, the investigation kind
it takes off.
But that wasn't really the case with Donna.
Even with the report filed, not much was done.
Everyone was just waiting for Donna to call it for parents and say that she was okay or just
come walking through the door at any moment
with a story about where she'd been.
But as the days passed, people started wondering
if something terrible had happened to her.
Like maybe she'd fallen into the nearby Mississippi
River and froze to death or drowned.
So finally, on December 21st, this is five days
since Donna was last seen in two days since
she was reported missing.
This is when authorities set out on their first search.
And they went all out, maybe trying to make up for lost time.
Local fire departments and search and rescue dogs did ground searches in the area.
And the Minneapolis helicopter flew in to do an aerial search.
They didn't find anything.
Police also sent out a release to the press about Donna's disappearance.
And they finally sat down for interviews with four critical people to this case.
Those who were there that night at the get-together.
That was Donna's boyfriend Gary.
Gary's ex-girlfriend, who was the mother of his child, her name's Colleen Harwick,
Gary and Colleen's preschool-aged child, who we're going to call Adam, and Colleen's
current boyfriend, Chuck Darnell.
So again, that's Gary, Gary's ex, their kid, and Gary's ex's current boyfriend.
So Gary was interviewed first, and here's what he said happened.
On the evening of Sunday, December 16,
he and Donna made the 20-something-minute drive
from the home that they shared in Plainview
to Colleen's house in Wabashat
to drop his son Adam Becoff after a weekend visit.
And when they arrived, Colleen invited him
and Donna in for drinks, and they accepted.
Things were going well.
They were all drinking, having a good time,
until sometime between 10 and 11 p.m.
That's when he and Donna got into an argument.
It's not super clear what the argument was about, but it seemed like it had something to do with the fact that Gary used to date calling.
Well, she wasn't mad until they started to enjoy their evening and have cocktails and then they came up.
And that's where she got irritated.
And you know, I can't imagine being there and having cocktails
and then maybe there were bad-eyed and flirtatious.
I don't know, I wasn't there, but that's what I'm reading
is what happened.
And she became upset over it.
Gary said that the argument got heated
and even physical at one point. He told investigators that he
ended up pushing Donna and that was kind of the final straw for her. After that, she stormed off
into the kitchen area. Gary says that he took a moment to cool off and then he went to go talk to
her but she wasn't in the kitchen. According to an interview Gary did with Winona Daily News,
that's when his preschool-age son told him that he saw Donna walk out the door.
So Gary walked outside to find her, but he didn't see her anywhere.
He noticed that her 82 Pontiac Bonneville was still in the driveway, and when he looked
inside of it he saw her purse was sitting there, which meant that she probably wouldn't
have gone too far.
Gary told Winona Daily News, quote, I went out and looked in the alley around the house anywhere I could look. I looked
under trees, anything." Now remember, it was snowing that night, but Gary didn't mention seeing
any footprints or anything indicating where she'd gone. By the time 1145 rolled around with no
signs of Donna, Gary decided it was time to call
the authorities.
He was especially worried about his girlfriend because he told police that she wasn't dressed
for the freezing temperature in the snow.
And so that was Gary's story.
Next, police talked with Chuck, who actually didn't have anything to offer.
He said that he was passed out on the couch from drinking too much when all of this went down
and he didn't remember a thing.
And like Chuck, Colleen didn't have much to say.
She told investigators that she was upstairs
and didn't see anything.
Please even try talking to Adam, the preschooler,
but he couldn't really tell them anything either.
All investigators had was Gary Statement
and a woman who had vanished without a trace.
Even as the days continued dragging by with no word from Donna, authorities still weren't
100% convinced that she was the victim of a crime.
On December 26th, then Wabishaw Police Chief Dave Krueger told Winona Daily News flat
out that foul play was not suspected.
But it was clear that people in the community were losing hope that she would be found alive.
Local newspapers documented rumors that were flying around about Donna's disappearance
as the weeks and months passed by with no sign of her.
Some people were saying that she'd been found dead in the Zumbro River, a tributary of
the Mississippi River on the outskirts of Wabashaw.
Other people were gossiping that she'd been found murdered and sexually assaulted in
a park.
Still, others claimed that they'd seen her alive at local bars.
A psychic even came forward and said that they had a vision of Donna's body floating
in the Mississippi River.
But even though all of the talk going around town was nothing more than unsubstantiated
gossip, it still bothered Donna's mom, Phyllis.
She knew that Donna wouldn't have gone this long without calling if she was okay.
She certainly wouldn't have left her beloved car behind, but the thought of her daughter dead somewhere was more than Phyllis could bear.
Donna's best friend, Mary Klein, agreed that vanishing with no word like this was super unlike
the Donna that she knew. Mary was also quoted in the Winona Daily News saying that
something had to have happened to Donna for her to just disappear like this. She thought maybe she drank too much alcohol and had become disoriented? That mixed with the
fact that she didn't have her glasses, maybe she walked into the Mississippi River.
But not everyone agreed with Mary. In that same article, Gary said that he thought Donna was still alive.
He knew she was drinking pretty heavily that night, but he said that she wasn't like a sloppy drunk or anything, and certainly not incoherent enough to put herself in danger
of drowning in the Mississippi River. He said, quote, who the hell would walk into the river
when it's freezing out? Instead, Gary had his own theory about what happened. He thought
Donna ran away, perhaps with another man. Despite Donna's family growing
less hopeful that she'd turn up alive, they put out one last desperate plea. In that same
Winona Daily News article, Donna sister Christina said, quote, we just want Donna to know she should
call us and that we love her." It took until March 1991 for investigators to really
begin to consider the possibility that Donna was the victim of a crime. Three months after Donna
vanished, then Chief Krueger told the star Tribune that there were three possibilities. She got
disoriented and wandered into rough terrain and died there. She hitched a ride somewhere,
or she was the victim of foul play. But with no evidence or clues, investigators were stuck,
still not knowing if they had a crime on their hands. Donas' case remained at a stand still for
the coming months, and things were only further frustrated in July when Gary died by suicide.
Since Gary was the last person
to see Donna that December night, his death was a huge blow to the investigation. If there
was anything that Gary had neglected to tell police about the night she vanished, that information
died with him. And it left the community wondering what led to Gary making such a decision was he driven by a shattered
heart or a guilty conscience, there were plenty of people who truly didn't think Gary had
anything to do with Donna's disappearance.
Her best friend Mary told Winona Daily News that she didn't think Gary would ever hurt
Donna.
She said, quote, she would always talk about him.
I think she loved him and he really loved her."
Mary also noted that Gary and Donna had big plans for their future, such as possibly publishing
a children's book that they had been writing together before she disappeared.
After Gary's death, Donna's case went ice-cold. There were a few tips here and there, supposed sightings and such, but nothing
that ever panned out. The next big push in her case didn't come until 2006 when authorities
tried using social media to get her story out there, but that didn't really amount to
anything noteworthy either. So when Chief Warren's cold case board finished reviewing Donna's case
in 2012, they were ready to make some big moves.
Two decades was far too long for any case to sit essentially stagnant like that.
And once we're got out that the police department was re-examining Donna's case,
tips actually came flooding in. They got a psychic tip that Donna was in a wooded area,
well lit by the moon, but they also got another psychic tip that was more specific and
easier to investigate. The tipster said that they felt Donna was behind the National Guard post
in Wabashah along Highway 61. Now this tip was interesting because Chief Warren was already
thinking about searching that area. He basically took this tip as the push he needed to get a search in motion.
He called in volunteers from the community United effort
or Q, Center for Missing Persons.
He wanted to search not only the area
behind the National Guard building,
but also a nearby pond.
Since the people from the Q Center were volunteers,
he only had them in Wabashaw for the weekend,
so they got busy.
Volunteers and cadaver dogs searched the National Guard
Armory area, but they found nothing.
And just as they were about to move on to that nearby pond,
police got another tip.
We're getting closer to that body of water.
Someone had called in a tip and said that they found what
they believed to be a monkey skull on Highway 42.
And that's just down the road here about four miles
up on the hill.
So where it came to me and I made a major reaction call
and suspended everything going on in Wabashop
and sent everybody up to this area where this skull was found.
Listen, I know what you're thinking.
A monkey skull in Minnesota?
And just to save you a Google search, no monkeys are not native to Minnesota, or even
North America for that matter.
So why this tipster would assume it was a monkey skull when they found it, I truly do
not have the slightest clue.
Chief Warren was also super baffled by this when he got the tip.
For good reason, he assumed the quote unquote monkey skull
was probably human, maybe even donas.
So like Chief Warren said, he asked everyone to go to the farm
where it was found, not only to collect the skull,
but also to search the area for any other remains.
But here's the thing.
When he got to the farm, he was told
there had been a misunderstanding.
The tips were said that they didn't actually have
the skull with them anymore.
They hadn't even found it recently.
They found it back in the early 90s.
And since they just assumed, again,
that it was a monkey skull,
they didn't report it back then. And then get this. After they just assumed, again, that it was a monkey skull, they didn't report it back
then.
And then get this.
After they found it, they ended up just tossing it into their manure spreader and spreading
it all across their fields.
You heard that right.
That skull had been completely destroyed years ago and was now fertilizing their fields.
I felt kind of awkward at the time.
I tried to hold back my, some of my reactions
because I didn't understand all that could happen.
But that wasn't their fault.
It's mine for suspending what's going on.
So what I did was, as I pulled everybody up on that hillside
and we searched two areas of farmland
that are about 100 acres.
And cadaver dogs had a couple hits, but we took
what we found and nothing ever came back to being human bone.
I'll be honest, when I first heard that this tipster found a human-like skull and then
proceeded to completely destroy it, a alarm bell started going off in my head.
Like, saying that suspicious is the understatement of the century. But
Chief Warren told our reporting team that he doesn't see it that way.
For one, they didn't think it was anything that what perked their interest was all this stuff going
on years later. You know what? Remember when I found that? Yeah, column, and that's what happened.
No offense to them. I mean, more in a rural area and farming is pretty big in Minnesota, and a lot of things
go into those spreaders and get spread.
And they didn't think that nothing of it, but then years later, they were trying to help
by saying, hey, we found this back then, and we thought it was a... but it wasn't.
Well, then again, I don't know what age bracket this person was, and I don't have a name,
but I know that they meant well, their intentions meant well.
After the devastation of that dead end tip, Chief Warren said that he kind of took a step back and realized that the investigation had gotten too big for their small agency to handle.
He just got blown out of the water and he got too big too quick, it's hard to control, it was like a wildfire. So to contain it, we shut some things down, just so things didn't get overblown.
And then you know you have psychics calling and because this just had to blew up.
And then they're calling and saying, well she could be here and I took every single tip as
if it were happening. But we're so small we got overrun, we couldn't handle it. So we had
to shut of down.
Chief Warren wanted to return to that pond
that they nearly searched before getting the skull tip.
But the timing with the cue center didn't work out
and it wasn't clear when it ever would.
But even though there was a pause
on the large-scale searches and the investigative efforts
for now, that didn't stop Chief Warren
from quietly mulling over the case
and looking into his long-held theory
about what really happened to Donna.
I've been saying it from the giggle.
I don't believe she ever left the house.
I'll just tell you what I think happened and hopefully I don't get criticized too much
for it, but my theory is I had that argument and I think Gary Schobder, like you said he did.
And I think it's easy as her hitting her head on the side of the table or the floor and
killed her. He freaked out.
And Chief Warren's theory wasn't coming from out of left field. He'd actually received a few tips from some of Colleen's old neighbors that she'd gotten
a lot of cement delivered to her house just two days after Donna went missing.
So I checked the records.
Of course they had some work they're done from the cement company and I'm like what the
heck?
Making things even more suspicious was the fact that there was no record of Colleen
hiring anyone to do the cement work.
She just had the cement delivered to her house.
And there was still one more thing supporting Chief Warren's theory.
The fact that one of Donna's eyeglass lenses was found at Colleen's house.
He found it hard to believe that she would just run out the door into the night without
her glasses fully working or intact.
So in 2013, armed with a hunch and a little bit of evidence,
Chief Warren decided to see if he could prove his suspicions
that Donette never left the house
and was buried somewhere in the basement.
Now, obviously, a hunch, no matter how strong,
isn't probable cause, so Chief Warren knew
he wouldn't be able to get a search warrant.
And instead, he needed to get the current homeowner's permission to search the basement.
Colleen no longer owned the house, but one of her relatives did.
Understandably, Chief Warren was worried that the relative wouldn't welcome into their home a search team that might prove their family member helped cover up a homicide.
But to his surprise, they okayed the search. Like I mentioned earlier,
Wabashat is a small rural city, so they didn't have all the resources, like a large
metropolitan police department might have. And they certainly weren't equipped to do a scan of a
cement basement all by themselves. So Chief Warren called in reinforcements.
We brought a team in. It was a nonprofit out of Wisconsin with a floor scanner and some
cadaver dogs and some screens that we could sift dirt on.
So what we did was we drilled bore holes.
First of all, we scanned the entire basement.
Well, not the entire basement, but we scanned it.
And we took some tests with the Home Wars permission that we'd fix anything that we disturbed.
We finished our testing and we left.
Chief Warren wasn't sure when he would get the results of those tests back, so he waited
patiently and waited and eventually he got tired of waiting.
So I called.
I want to see that floor scan because there's a portion of that basement that wasn't done
by this nonprofit, right?
So I called the place and I won't say names because it's not right for me to point fingers,
but they said, well, we don't save that data.
And I said, well, but I never saw the data.
You heard that right.
The nonprofit didn't save the data of the scan,
but they also never bothered to tell Chief Warren
what was found with the scan, if anything.
So all of that hard work, all of those results
were just completely gone.
I was professionally disappointed that I was on that
and didn't know that I didn't get to see the data.
Talk about having dreams about it even.
I mean, you work so hard on something.
I didn't know they didn't say that data, but that's how you learn.
Chief Warren said that even if he had gotten the results back,
he's not sure that they would have been what he was hoping for,
because they didn't get to examine the entirety of the basement.
The basement theory is one that he continued holding on to, even after leaving the Wabusha
Police Department in the fall of 2015 to become the chief deputy at the Wabusha County
Sheriff's Office.
But when he left the police department, he didn't want to leave Don as case behind, especially
considering that the Sheriff's Office had more resources at their fingertips than the police department did.
So I wasn't doing it to, hey I want to keep this for me, I was doing it saying, hey we're
going to ride with this because we have more resources and you know instead of just you
working on it, let's all work on it.
Since 2015 there hasn't been much movement in Don is case, but that doesn't mean it's
sitting on a shelf just collecting dust. Even when there have been Lowell's Chief Deputy Warren has been thumbing
through the case file, hoping something new will pop out at him with each read through.
He's also actively planning to return to Colleen's old home, which, by the way, is still owned by
that same relative. He wants to retest the basement for human remains.
by that same relative. He wants to retest the basement for human remains.
So sometimes soon when I get permission,
I do plan on going back and having ground zero completely done.
So I can tell the residents I won't be back
and satisfied nothing's here.
But I can't say that right now because I still believe that.
Sometimes some things aren't as far as a way
as you think they are, you know what I mean?
And if it ends up that way, then it's so big, but it's gotta be balanced.
This time, instead of using a nonprofit for the testing,
he is bringing in the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension,
who have more tools at their disposal.
Well, they have the ground penetrating radar that got better since the last time I used it.
They have forensic testing they can do on the underfloor of that house. Even today they can do that. The lumen
all. They could do that and see the blue if they'd like, but yeah, it'd be different
to see. Well, just put this way, they have more things that they're disposal than I ever
thought even existed. And we don't have that type of technology.
We asked Chief Deputy Warren if he's worried
that the first search scared someone
who might have knowledge of the case.
And if Donna really was buried down there in the basement,
maybe they dug her up and moved her.
But he's confident that's not the case.
Wabusha is a small city and Colleen's old house
is located on one of the main roads.
So he thinks that someone would have definitely seen something suspicious.
Chief Deputy Warren remains hopeful that future testing will yield results to confirm his
theory, and he told our reporting team that a very recent conversation with a key person
in the case has him more confident than ever that it will.
But he didn't want to elaborate on who that person was or what they said,
so as to protect the integrity of the investigation. We asked him if the next search of the basement
doesn't show any sign of Donna, what else does he think could have happened to her? If she truly
did storm out of the house that cold December night. What else would have happened as easy as leaving the hall swapping down the 60
hitting a truck with a trucker or something?
He also thinks it's possible that she was dumped in that nearby pond that he
wanted to search with the QCenter back in 2012 and it's actually something he's
still wants to search. With technology comes better equipment and I think maybe
we could have a search
of that pond done the one as well. It's so murky, you can't see nothing well, but maybe the technology can't.
They found the Titanic, why not?
Chief Deputy Warren also said that both Colleen and Chuck are still alive and he
wants to re-interview them soon, hoping that maybe maybe, they hold the key to solving a case
that has haunted Wabusha since 1990.
For more than 30 years, Donna's family and friends have been left wondering what happened
to her.
They deserve closure, and Donna deserves justice.
If you have any information about the 1990 disappearance of Donna Ingersol, please contact Chief Deputy Jim Warren at the Wabusha County Sheriff's Office at 651-565-3361, or you can email him at jwarren-WA-RR-en at ceo.wabusha.mn.us.
We'll have all of that in this show notes. Donna was 4.11 and about 106 pounds when she vanished.
She has blonde hair and green or hazel eyes and was last seen wearing boots and blue jeans.
She would be 57 by Ryan Lewis.
To learn more about the Deck and our advocacy work, visit thedeckpodcast.com.
So what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
Visit theDeathPodcast.com.
So, what do you think Chuck, do you approve?
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