Paynesville meeting, Strib article
Posted by joy.the.curious on Dec 13, 2015 in Jacob | 16 comments
One week ago, Patty and Jerry Wetterling hosted a community meeting for the residents of Paynesville titled, “Paynesville: Moving Forward.” It was meant to serve as a night of healing and sharing for both the Wetterlings and the Paynesville community who both found themselves “thrown together in a state of chaos” after the arrest of Danny Heinrich on October 29th.
It was a powerful night, and important on so many levels. It gave Paynesville Police Chief Paul Wegner a chance to instill confidence in his community, promising that what happened 30 years ago in Paynesville would not happen today. It gave Paynesville residents a chance to hear from Captain Pam Jensen of the Stearns County Sheriff’s Office, who gave a brief update and spelled out the kind of information they were looking for to help their case. It gave Jared a chance to see the amazing amount of support he has from the people in his community. And, it gave Patty a chance to do what she does best… to connect with people and advocate for a better, safer world.
It truly was a win-win for everyone involved.
That same night, I had also been asked by Jenna Ross, a reporter from the StarTribune, to sit down and share some thoughts for a follow-up article about me and my blog. I had previously commented on an article Jenna had written about the Paynesville victims, and they wanted to use some of my additional comments from that story for another article.
I knew I’d be busy the night of the meeting, so in an effort to save time, I decided to just write some quick answers to a few of Jenna’s questions. However, as I wrote, I quickly realized that none of her questions had a quick or simple answer.
I’m amazed that she was able to take what I wrote, along with input from Patty, Jared, and others, and craft it into a story that reveals how much Jacob’s case has meant to me over the past five years. This was truly a monumental task, given the sheer amount of reluctance and ambivalence I had going into this.
Thank you, Jenna, for your time, talent, and compassion. Thanks also to Renee Jones Schneider for her wonderful photos and videography.
Inside one woman's search for Jacob Wetterling
Haunted by the boy's 1989 disappearance, Joy Baker began a single-minded quest to connect some dots.
By Jenna Ross Star Tribune | December 12, 2015
ST. JOSEPH, Minn. – The remoteness of the road overwhelmed her. Standing beside it, Joy Baker couldn’t make sense of what had happened there two decades before: Jacob Wetterling, 11 years old, taken by a masked man, never to be seen since.
Baker had been 22 at the time of his abduction, “not much older than a kid myself.” But in 2010, looking down that road, she thought of her two sons.
“I stared at that spot,” she said, “and suddenly felt this urge to understand exactly what happened there.”
Baker, now 48, began writing about the Wetterling investigation on her blog, “Joy the Curious,” launching a process of tireless questioning that Patty Wetterling, Jacob’s mother, credits with uncovering new possibilities in the case “way before anyone was really paying attention.’’
Those questions led Baker to a farmhouse on that road in rural St. Joseph. That in turn brought her to nearby Cold Spring, which steered her to Paynesville, farther southwest. There, through newspaper archives, interviews and tips, she started tallying attacks in the 1980s in which a man — sometimes wearing a mask, once wielding a knife — would approach or accost boys, often groping their groins.
Investigators have now made official the questions Baker raised in 2013: Might the Paynesville attacks be connected to the kidnapping and assault of a Cold Spring boy just months before Jacob Wetterling’s abduction? Might they be linked to Jacob?
In October, authorities named a former Paynesville man who lived within blocks of the attacks a “person of interest” in the Wetterling case.
DNA evidence tied Daniel James Heinrich, 52, to the Cold Spring assault and didn’t rule him out from a Paynesville attack, though it ruled out 80.5 percent of the population. Though he could no longer be charged in the Cold Spring case — the statute of limitations had run out — he was charged in federal court with receiving and possessing child pornography, after a search of his home turned up binders of photographs. Heinrich, who was questioned soon after Wetterling’s kidnapping, has long denied involvement in that crime.
Stearns County Sheriff John Sanner declined to comment last week, citing the active investigation. But in the past, Sanner has said that his office knew about at least some of the Paynesville attacks long before Baker wrote about them.
Investigative teams routinely speculate about whether different crimes might be related, he said last year. “The difference is, she’s speculating and playing it out on a public stage, where anybody can read it.
“We have a much higher bar, and our bar is proof and fact.”
But Patty Wetterling believes Baker’s research into what authorities have since dubbed the “Paynesville assault cluster” pushed a possible link to Jacob’s abduction to “the top of the pile.”
Other things might have driven the case to this point, Wetterling said, “but from my vantage point, I see her as being absolutely pivotal to what’s going on right now.”
***
When I first started writing about Jacob three years ago, I was hopeful that I could somehow make a difference. I really believed if I could talk to the right people, get the facts straight and keep the conversation going, that maybe someone somewhere might hold the key that could unlock this 24-year-old mystery.
— Blog post, Oct. 22, 2013
***
Baker’s blog began with a very different mystery: an old beach house on Longboat Key, Fla.
Each year, on family vacations, Baker would walk along the shore and wonder about the “ramshackle, weather beaten house” and its past lives. She delved into the history of the Villa Am Meer, chronicling her findings online and trading tips and memories with readers.
After that story, Baker searched for a new subject, deciding against an unsolved murder. She began looking into Jacob’s disappearance and weeks later, in 2010, investigators began digging up a half-dozen truckloads of dirt and ash from a farm property near where Jacob was taken, a property that had been searched twice before. (Forensic tests of that farm later turned up no evidence.)
“It seemed like such a hopeful, big break in the case,” she said. “I decided it must be a sign.”
At the time, Baker was in the midst of “a full-blown midlife crisis,” she said. After two decades running an advertising agency, Baker wondered whether she ought to be writing. So she sold half the business and, alongside other projects, dug into Jacob’s case.
Baker studied aerial photos of the road. She researched who lived along it. Then she stopped, nervous about her sons, who are now 19 and 20 years old. But a phone call from the man who lived on the farm across the road from the abduction, long called a “person of interest” in the case, renewed her interest. She arranged a meeting between him and a man named Kevin (whom she identifies only by first name in her blog), who as a 21-year-old had followed the cops to the crime scene on the night of abduction, leaving behind tire tracks.
Through the years, law enforcement had created a “sort of adversarial” relationship between the two men, said the man living on the farm, who asked that his name not be used. So “for her to get us two together” was a feat, the man said. “She’s very intuitive, very cognitive about connections and how things and people go together.”
The three met at a Panera Bread in St. Cloud and talked for three hours. Baker then recounted their stories on her blog with maps, dates and details.
Why, she asked, would these two men agree to talk to her, “a wannabe writer/investigator?”
“Because I agreed to tell their stories in their own words, and to tell them honestly,” she wrote. “No time or space constraints. No deadlines. No ratings wars … I was in it for the right reasons, and they could tell.”
***
The assault took place just ten months before Jacob Wetterling was abducted, in a town less than 10 miles away. And like Jacob, Jared’s abductor was never found.
— Blog post, Aug. 11, 2013
***
Baker’s work “really started to click” after she talked with Jared Scheierl, the Cold Spring boy who is now 39. Baker found him with the help of her genealogy skills and one key fact, reported in the press: Scheierl was kidnapped six days before his 13th birthday.
On a January night in 1989, Scheierl was walking home from the Side Cafe when a man forced him into the back seat of his car. He told him he had a gun. After driving for 15 minutes, the man stopped on a gravel road and sexually assaulted Scheierl, wiping his mouth on the boy’s sweatshirt.
After releasing him, the driver told Scheierl “not to look back or he would be shot,” according to court documents.
Ten months later, after Jacob was abducted, investigators thought it was “entirely likely” that Scheierl’s abductor might have been responsible, said Al Garber, the FBI supervisor in charge of the Wetterling investigation in 1989. Scheierl was questioned repeatedly and asked to view a dozen lineups, until he was broken down, he said.
When Baker contacted him in 2013, just days after his father died, it had been years since he had spoken publicly, and then using only his first name. But for some reason, he talked.
“I like to think she balanced emotions and information,” Scheierl said, asking not just about his assault but other parts of his life, including his grief over his father’s death. “She would not only listen, but she also cared.”
After Baker stumbled upon a 1987 article in the Paynesville Press about a handful of attacks against boys there, Scheierl reached out to victims in the small city where he now lived. “He introduced himself as a victim himself,” she said. “He bravely laid it all out there.”
Baker, now head of marketing and public relations for a Willmar hospital, spent weekends researching tips and suspects, passing along what she found to the sheriff’s office. In the past few years, she’s received close to 500 tips. She enters each into a database. She keeps little paper, digitizing documents, and there are no suspect photographs or timelines taped to the walls of her office of her home in New London, Minn. It’s decorated, instead, with a vintage typewriter and colorful art. One print reads, “She knew the answers would come with time and love.”
***
It’s hard to explain why I keep at this. For the past four years, I’ve been searching for Jacob Wetterling … a boy I’ve never known, from a town I had barely heard of.
— Blog post, July 15, 2014
***
Before the dozen TV news cameras showed up, before more than 150 residents took their seats, Baker and Patty Wetterling stood together in the Paynesville High School auditorium. Baker showed Wetterling what she had set up — a box for tip sheets, a microphone for questions. The pair smiled, recalling the phone call that led to the event that was about to begin.
“I think we were both a little punchy that night,” Baker said.
“I think we had the same idea,” Wetterling said, “which is weird.”
The idea: host a gathering in Paynesville to offer support to victims, request help from residents and assure families that today, police would thoroughly investigate similar attacks. The Wetterlings took the stage that night, while Baker worked in the background — talking quietly with residents, ushering victims away from the media. She introduced Patty to the sound guy, the police chief, a victim’s mother.
“There’s no ego involved,” Patty Wetterling said later, of working with Joy. “There’s just Joy, trying to follow her heart and do what she can to help.”
Baker first met Wetterling in 2012, at a charity fundraiser in Willmar, introducing herself and her blog. The next day, they spoke by phone. “I hung up and thought … oh my God, she probably thinks I’m a stalker,” Baker said. “I was right. She did.”
But Wetterling found the information Baker had gathered “jaw-dropping” and her style “respectful.” Pretty quickly, she trusted her. So she understands why survivors do too.
Baker has helped Wetterling organize a room full of boxes in her home, filled with materials about the case. She has become someone Wetterling can laugh with, joking in a way that might seem “very odd or dark” to outsiders, Wetterling said. She has entered a small group Wetterling’s therapist refers to as “my snuggle group.”
Becoming close with the people she’s writing about has made Baker’s work more meaningful, she said, but also trickier. “When I was just a little amateur sleuther, and they were all just names on paper, it was easier, in a sense.”
***
Now, after all our endless hours of research, interviews, phone calls, texts and e-mails, Jared finally has his guy … Emotionally, I have been all over the place. Happy, sad, pissed, confused, exhausted … you name it.
— Blog post, Nov. 7, 2015
***
In late October, the FBI, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and the Stearns County Sheriff’s Office held a news conference: Searching Heinrich’s Annandale house for evidence of Scheierl or Wetterling, investigators found computer folders and 19 three-ring binders that contained child pornography.
But the criminal complaint goes beyond child porn: DNA evidence found on Scheierl’s sweatshirt matched Heinrich, it says. Tire marks found next to the Wetterling abduction scene were similar to impressions taken in 1990 from Heinrich’s 1982 Ford EXP. A shoe print, too, corresponded in size and style.
The complaint also details eight Paynesville attacks, pointing out that Heinrich lived within a mile of each. A call Friday to Heinrich’s attorney was not returned.
Baker retreated to her parents’ Christmas tree farm along the Rum River, where she grew up, too overwhelmed to discuss the case with the media. She was happy that Scheierl had answers. Sad that the statute of limitations had run out. Confused about the case’s details.
She was also reluctant to become a part of the story, hoping to keep the focus on the victims.
Baker continues to get tips. On her blog, she keeps posing questions. Now, they’re about Heinrich, whose name she had come across but never investigated. What cars did Heinrich have access to, and when? Was Heinrich stalking Scheierl, or did he happen to see a group of kids, then wait to see if any would walk home alone?
Then there’s the location: Why Cold Spring? And if it was Heinrich, “What in the world,” she said, her eyes wide, “was he doing on that dead end road in the middle of nowhere in St. Joseph?”
The full story can be found here:
http://www.startribune.com/inside-one-woman-s-search-for-jacob-wetterling/361683551/
#ThinkingJacob
Next time
Happy Birthday Jacob
16 Comments
Kathy C. Harris | December 13, 2015 at 8:02 am
Great job!
Nick Hentges | December 13, 2015 at 8:14 am
Good very early morning. I write this at about 6:25 am. I’ve been reading your blog since I heard about it through a Google search that I did on Jacobs disappearance not to long before the capture of Danny Heinrich. I was about 12 when Jacob vanished and I grew up on a farm about 20 miles north of Minneapolis. Needless to say I’ve also been a victim of child molestation by a close family friend at the time(no longer thank goodness). As the years have gone by I’ve always been wanting to do more to help solve this case! Ask any of my family members and they will tell you that I’ve followed it to a t! Maybe that’s a little bit creepy or crazy but no child should ever have to go through what Jared, Jacob, myself and the countless other children have been through or ever will go through in life. This brings me to the point of thanking you for your countless hours of time, sleepless nights and everything else you do. I have a great question for you this morning. Maybe this could bring a little bit of insight. Earlier this year you wrote about a neighborhood child who would ride his bike to the store sometimes later in the evening. Could it be possible that night when Jacob, his brother and his friend went to the store that night they were not in fact the intended targets at all? Could it be that Danny had been stalking this child for some time, and knowing that he was allowed out later in the evenings, and knowing the next day was not a school day he more than likely would be going to the store that night? So why not sit around the rural area and wait? Instead of it being that child it just happened to be Jacob Wetterling. Who I believe that you wrote had a somewhat similar appearance to the other child and none the less it was dark. This was just my thought and maybe I’m wrong and misread some of that earlier information. I do believe it was Danny Heinrich that did this but unlike Jared he didn’t let him go this time unfortunately but I pray he is alive somewhere and that Mr. Heinrich will get honest and bring Jacob home to his loving family. I know that this was long but thanks for taking the time to read this.
Jim Wookey | December 13, 2015 at 10:37 am
Keep up your good work Joy. Thank you for all you do! There will be an ending to this story. I am faithful of that!
Michele Barg-Knisley | December 13, 2015 at 10:43 am
As a Paynesville resident, and have been my entire life, I am grateful that there are people like you who care enough about others to take the time to share this.
Fay Kuznia | December 13, 2015 at 1:32 pm
I am truly impressed by not only your writing, but your curiosity, perseverance and human empathy! Congratulations on a job well done.
J | December 13, 2015 at 2:14 pm
Nice job, Joy, your work has been quite inspirational.
I couldn’t help but think about your experience as I read an article this morning about ‘outsiders’ solving a 50-year old math problem.
http://www.wired.com/2015/12/outsiders-crack-a-50-year-old-math-problem/
Sometimes a fresh perspective, or perspectives from a broader group, are are required to solve tough problems. This is often uncomfortable for ‘insiders,’ but I think they can take some comfort from that fact that we are seeing this more and more often across more and more fields (with better access to info and better tools to share). A development to welcome, and not to feel too defensive about (although that’s natural, it’s hard not to). We’re all better served by more of this ‘open source’ problem solving–that’s what we need to focus on. As you have established! Well done.
Sue | December 13, 2015 at 2:43 pm
I have always said if I were ever missing, I would want Patty looking for me. I now add you to that list. Thank you.
Jim | December 13, 2015 at 6:56 pm
great work Joy but I doubt that you are done , there are definite answers still needed and I hope you will continue to search for them ,you and the local people need to keep the story in the news and alive still if you can
Dean | December 13, 2015 at 8:58 pm
Joy, we are all indebted to you. Please continue your great work with Patty and know the greater Minnesota community is behind you both — 100%.
Rick | December 13, 2015 at 11:54 pm
Excellent post Joy. Truly an illuminating and informative description of your journey from 2011 until the present with regard to the Jacob Wetterling case. I too sense that we are so much closer to resolution of this case and I pray for that for the Wetterling family. Your tireless work has made that possible. Bless you, Joy.
Gail | December 14, 2015 at 9:14 am
I feel in my heart that Danny Heinrich is 100% the one who took Jacob. I have followed this story since day 1. I helped with flyers, I had a Jacob’s Hope button on my door for years and years. I truly thought I would see him one day. There was never another report in the area of another boy being attacked after Jacob was taken. He knew he went too far that time.
#ThinkingJacobDebbie | December 14, 2015 at 7:57 pm
Keep the wheels of justice turning. Keep connecting the dots. Thank you, Joy.
anonymous | December 15, 2015 at 12:22 am
They had Danny Heinrich in their sight in the 90’s but they just couldnt find that peice of evidence to get the ball across the goal line for the win. So what and where is that piece of evidence that links Danny Heinrich to Jacobs abduction?
anonymous | December 15, 2015 at 4:14 pm
Good job Joy.
Anon | June 13, 2016 at 12:33 pm
I can see why she would have thought you were a stalker…I would have felt the same way had I been in her shoes. *And*, being compelled by curiosity for truth and justice, I would have pressed forward (same as you did), had I been in your shoes.
I’m grateful for your writing and investigations. I was born in the late 80’s and grew up in a tiny town, just west of Alexandria. I was always told to ‘watch for unmarked, white vans, especially if they don’t have windows.’ ‘If a vehicle slows down while you’re walking/biking, you don’t have to talk to them….keep going, cross the street, or quickly find a safe place/knock on a neighbor’s door, go into the post office/the cafe, etc.’ ‘If you feel unsafe, be loud! Get passersby attention.’ And by all means, ‘you may not leave our yard or the neighbor’s yard, after dark.’
Jacob’s name was an entity in and of itself in our community. I remember hearing about him on the news. I grew up remembering his smile, and every time this topic was brought up, my stomach would clench and churn. And I would feel forced to examine my own mortality and the possibility that it could have happened to me–to any of us.
I guess what I’m trying to say, is that it wasn’t until a couple of years ago that I faced this investigation, head on. I started Googling reliable news sources and quickly found your blog. Your blog was altogether easier to read, because you had pieced a lot of the information together (with links) while still providing critical questions and analytical thought processes to help me, as the reader, reflect on the information, myself. I have begun to ‘leave the light on for Jacob’ some nights….just because it helps to center my heart on fighting for those who are missing/exploited/or who have lost their voice. This is my purpose in life, too.
Joan MacDowell | September 6, 2016 at 7:12 pm
Thank you for your dedication to bringing Jacob home, God bless! It was not the outcome we all hoped for but now he is home and the Wetterling’s have some answers to the years of wondering.