Missing Persons Files — Jacob Wetterling

On the night of October 22, 1989, eleven-year-old Jacob Wetterling was abducted at gunpoint on a rural road in St. Joseph, Minnesota — and for twenty-seven years, no one could say what happened to him. This episode traces the night of the abduction, the massive search that followed, a botched investigation that let the prime suspect walk free for decades, and the eventual confession that gave a grieving family the answers — and the heartbreak — they had waited a generation to receive.

Missing Persons Files — Jacob Wetterling
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On the evening of October 22, 1989, three boys rode their bikes down a dark Minnesota road — and one of them never came home. Jacob Wetterling was eleven years old. He wore a reflective orange vest and a red hockey jacket. He had followed every rule. And none of it mattered when a masked man stepped out of the dark with a gun. This episode tells the full story of what happened that night, what the investigation got wrong for twenty-seven years, and how a persistent mother, a quiet survivor, and a Minnesota blogger ultimately forced a confession when law enforcement could not.
The case is closed, but the weight of it doesn't lift easily. Jacob's abductor — Danny James Heinrich — was first interviewed by the FBI less than two months after the abduction. He was arrested in February 1990. He was released. The Stearns County Sheriff's Office cleared just twenty percent of its major crimes over four decades. A convicted sex offender told the FBI in 1991 exactly where to look — and the tip was apparently not followed up. Heinrich avoided capture for twenty-six years not because he was brilliant, but because the system around him failed, repeatedly and catastrophically. When the truth finally came, it came from a sweatshirt in an evidence locker, a DNA match, and a plea deal that left many people — including Jacob's own brother — unsatisfied. But it also came with something the Wetterling family had waited a generation for: answers, and the chance to bring Jacob home.

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