Drowning in
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Missing college students are turning up dead.
Either a serial killer is
on the loose in the
upper Midwest, leaving victims in area rivers --
or the Heartland is drowning in coincidence.
E-Mail: poeticjustice@vanceholmes.com
Missing in the Headlines
November 14, 2007
Midway through the Fall school term, there have been no news items about a male college student who vanished while partying with friends and was subsequently found dead in a river. No news . . . would be good news, but two related stories have surfaced in the press: reports of Indiana State University student, Scott Javins whose remains were recently found -- and the story of Gainesville State student, Justin Gaines who recently went missing.

Justin Gaines
Police in Gwinnett County, Ga are searching for 18-year-old, Justin Gaines, who has been missing since Thursday, November 1. The Atlanta Journal is reporting the student was at home in Duluth on Thursday. Of course that's the Duluth in Georgia, not Minnesota. Nonetheless the disturbing story is important.
According to a Police statement, Justin told his mother he was going out to a bar. He later called to ask a friend to pick him up from Wild Bill's Entertainment Hall, but the friend was unable to get him. Nobody has heard from Justin since. Gaines is a freshman at the Oconee campus of Gainesville College, said his mother, Erika Wilson.
Ms. Wilson thinks her son likely had several alcoholic drinks at Wild Bill's. "I don't know if he left with someone or if he tried to crash there, but it's not like him not to come home," she said. "I haven't slept in days . . . I'm going out of my mind."
Scott Javins was 20-years-old when he went missing. He disappeared in the early morning hours of May 24, 2002, after attending a party with friends. Last month, on October 12, 2007 Indiana's Tribune-Star reported:
"For the past five and a half years, Javins' family members have sought local and national media attention to help find Scott. Police say it was a tip Friday morning to the Indiana State Police Special Investigations . . . that led them to search a section of the Wabash River near the eastern bank, just south of Fairbanks Park and the Terre Haute Family Y. There, Indiana State Police divers located a car matching the general description of Javins' 2002 Honda Civic Si."
Though they won't reveal exactly why, investigators are now handling the case as a homicide. Scott's parents, Merv and Doreena Javins, said the discovery of their son's remains inside his car in the Wabash River is a first step to bringing them closure -- but that many mysteries remain. "At about 4:30 this morning, it was just like I heard a voice and it said, 'Dad, I'm home,'" Merv Javins said Sunday, October 14, "Now we're hoping we can find an answer to exactly what happened that night."
Nowhere to Be Found
Abel Bolanos
April 5, 2007
The last time anybody saw Iowa State University sophomore, Abel Bolanos, he was at a party having a good time. Friends recall he left the party and headed home very early on the morning of April 1. He was believed to be walking the short distance to his residence hall sometime around 4 AM.
When the 5-foot-7, 165 pound student couldn't be located later that day, family and friends were perplexed. They described Abel as funny, likable, trustworthy -- "a really nice guy." It simply wasn't like him to wander off without leaving word. Local authorities immediately understood the situation and responded quickly. Without delay, they began searching -- but found nothing.
Classmates said Abel's disappearance was particularly strange given his passion for school. The 19-year-old was attending Iowa State on an academic, four-year, tuition scholarship. Something had gone terribly wrong, and volunteers and rescue teams were soon summoned to broaden the search. On Monday, groups of Iowa State University students fanned out and began looking around campus buildings and residential areas. They went door to door asking residents whether they had seen Abel
-- but he had disappeared without a trace.
The mystery of the student's whereabouts ended shortly after 6 PM on Tuesday April 3 when a body was found in Lake LaVerne. Paramedics assisted divers as the corpse slowly emerged from the water under a blue tarp.
"Upon recovery, the body was examined and was positively identified as that of Abel Merlos Bolanos," said Iowa State Police Commander Gene Deisinger. "We are grief-stricken by the results," said a written statement by the family, read by Deisinger.
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The Truth About Chris Jenkins
November 20, 2006
Speaking to stunned reporters at a news conference, Minneapolis Chief of Police Tim Dolan said, "Sometimes we make mistakes. In this case, we made a mistake."
Perhaps nobody will ever know exactly how or why Chris Jenkins died, but we can certainly now say his death was not a fluke accident. Chris did not just get drunk and clumsily stumble into the river. He did not suddenly forget about his family and friends, wander off, and drown by mistake. It is not true that he killed himself. Chris Jenkins did not commit suicide.
Confirming suspicions long-held by many, Minneapolis police announced that they believe Chris Jenkins died after he was thrown off a bridge in downtown Minneapolis. Investigators said they'd identified a murder suspect and eyewitness to the 2002 killing of the University of Minnesota student.
Steve Jenkins told reporters he and his wife, Jan Jenkins, were "shocked" when they learned the case was being reclassified as a homicide.
One can only imagine their horror and grief. But instead of withdrawing, Chris' mother and father have spoken up, as they have for four agonizing years. They spoke calmly and with compassion. With no trace of bitterness or anger or irony, Steve and Jan Jenkins thanked the police. Their grace at such a moment is the definition of dignity.
After years of focusing on the many possible mistakes made by the murder victim, Chief Dolan has now confessed officers made "assumptions that led them to miss things" and to make a series of mistakes. Doubting Chris Jenkins' integrity was more than a mistake. The willful ignorance and dismissive refusal to investigate Chris' death prolonged and compounded his family's tragedy.
Despite opposing opinions from officials, Steve and Jan Jenkins always maintained there were signs of foul play, eventually being forced to conduct private investigations and track down their own leads. The painful search into their own child's story led them to reach out and help other parents in similar situations.
Chris Jenkins' integrity speaks through the integrity of his parents. There's no mistaking it.
In some sense, Chris was denied the dignity of his own death. Rumor, suspicion and doubt all served to rob Chris of the trust he deserved, and to cheat his loved ones. The situation was so dark and backward, official news of the young man's homicide is oddly a step forward into the light.
Steve Jenkins commented, "We knew it was foul play from the very moment. So there's a sense of relief, but it's a double-edged sword -- it does not bring Chris back."
Chris disappeared from the world. He was here, then he was gone, and he never came back. His body was eventually found, but somehow he never came back -- he was still missing. Now, for many, I'm sure it seems as though he's gone all over again.
But this time there is no reasonable doubt about Chris himself. He did not disappear in a drunken haze and mistakenly drown sight unseen. Someone else was involved. Someone did something to Chris to cause his story to end in the Mississippi river. There are no specifics, but the basic truth of Chris' story has been recovered. His integrity has been restored, and we now know he was the victim of a terrible crime.
Chief Dolan and his investigators may or may not ever solve this four-year old homicide, but the conspiracy theories and nonsense can finally be laid to rest. The many mistaken voices of denial and derision have been silenced, and at long last Chris Jenkins has been afforded a measure of dignity.
In an interview, Jan Jenkins looked upward saying "Chris, today it's your voice that is being heard."
Something is Finally Being Done
"So attention must be paid. He's not to be allowed to fall in his grave
like an old dog. Attention, attention finally must be paid to such a person."
-- Willy Loman's wife, Linda in Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman"
October 18, 2006
For years, concerned citizens have commented, complained and cried about a series of mysterious student deaths labeled "drownings" and filed away as unfortunate but coincidental accidents. For years, those painful cries have been laughed off -- or worse yet, simply ignored. It's one thing to investigate and dismiss baseless theories -- it's another to shrug off the deaths of dozens of young men.
As far back as 2001, there was wide-spread speculation that the many cases were related. With each new awful death, suspicion and frustration moved closer to fear and anger. Soon the talk became about a possible serial-killer, or copy cat killer stalking college campuses in the Midwest.
How many boys have strangely gone missing only to turn up dead in the river? Impossible to know. It all depends on what parameters you set, what you consider "strange," and how far back you go. Certainly, there have been 8 unsettling cases in the last 9 years -- and that's in the La Crosse area alone.
Looking at cases spanning the midwest, St. Cloud Minnesota professor, Dr. Lee Gilbertson, estimates a number between 26 and 30.
Needless to say, even one student's mysterious drowning is one too many and should be addressed by authorities. As Arthur Miller wrote in Death of a Salesman, "Attention must be paid." But obviously, an on-going series of eerily similar disappearances warrants a full -- on-going -- investigation.
The road is long indeed that never bends. Finally, a multi-agency review of the cases has begun. I sincerely hope this investigation brings some comfort to the many families, friends, students, and troubled on-lookers who want answers.
Speaking personally -- all I've ever wanted is for someone to pay attention. I've agonized at the thought of these men's deaths, and the thought that nobody in authority was looking into them. The one commonality I was certain of, was that all these identical drownings were being ignored and written off as "coincidence."
When family members have a gut feeling that something's not simply an accident -- police owe it to them to pay some attention. When a whole community of people have an unshakeable feeling that the mystery deaths will continue -- the authorities have to pay attention -- or be blamed for their willful ignorance. At long last, attention is being paid.
Excerpts from October 16, 2006 reports from WXOX -- Channel 19 News.
http://www.wxow.com/News/index.php?ID=3981
A St. Cloud Minnesota professor started digging deeper into the drownings here and other towns along the river, including St. Cloud. He specializes in computer mapping of crime. He found four patterns in 26 deaths that astounded him.
La Crosse county medical examiner John Steers has contaced all the police agencies involved and invited them to participate in a multi-agency review of the cases.
"I plan on gathering all the autopsy reports, gathering all the police reports, talking to the agencies that are involved, and seeing if I can come up with any similarities or something that may draw my attention to someting that we didn't know about, or if possible, eliminate the theories of a serial killer."
Steers says he still believes the only serial killer at work here is alcohol. But concedes if someone is pushing drunk college kids in the water . . . there may be no signs of foul play.
http://www.wxow.com/News/index.php?ID=3999
La Crosse County Medical Examiner John Steers admits he doesn't know what he'll find, if anything, and he is getting some grief for his review. But he's also getting some praise.
The family of Chris Jenkins, a University of Minnesota student who drowned back in 2002 even thanked Steers for his efforts.
Steers says, "He called me a hero basically because he said I'm the first public official whose actually taken the time to review all the cases and take time to look at them, not just write them off as a drowning and I'm not saying I'm not writing them off as drownings, but I want to keep an open mind."
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"I think there is someone out there. And I believe we can find him."
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Missing Matt Kruziki
The night of December 23, Kruziki was separated from a friend -- only identified by police as a fellow Hartland man -- who stayed inside the bar after a disagreement over a bill. On a 20-degree night in a city two hours from his hometown, Matthew Kruziki stood outside with no jacket, no cell phone, no wallet and no means of transportation.
Matt Kruziki's mother, Debbie, brother, Chris, and many, many others held out hope and searched, but feared the worst. Matt was the second Arrowhead graduate to go missing near the Mississippi River. For a time, Matt and drowning victim, Jared Dion, were Arrowhead varsity wrestling teammates.
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Drowning Cases to be Investigated
http://www.themilwaukeechannel.com/video/10070234/detail.html
The La Crosse Serial Killer
October 9,
2006
Two years ago, Police Chief Kondracki complained, "I just hope we don't have to keep revisiting this serial killer thing because it retracts from the progress we're making."
A make-shift memorial to Luke Homan sits at the foot of the levee in Riverside Park where his corpse was found. It is not a sign of progress.
Each time a student goes missing only to later turn up dead in the river, people talk about the possibility of a serial killer -- and each time, La Crosse police dismiss them as crazy conspiracy theorists.
Of course, the La Crosse authorities' steadfast refusal to address the theories -- makes them part of the conspiracy. People say the criminal has a free pass because police deny there's even been a crime.
It's easy to shrug off complaints from nervous and suspicious citizens. It's not so easy to ignore another dead body being pulled from the Mississippi. Ed Kondracki's heartfelt hopes and wishful dreams of progress have proven to be useless nonsense in light of Luke Homan's shocking death.
The last time this happened, the chief was trusted. He was listened to. He was given time to investigate this phenomenon and bring it to an end. Town meetings were held, gut-feelings were expressed, and promises were made.
It's become painfully obvious -- there's been no progress. The horror of yet another student-athlete's mysterious drowning is overwhelming.
Kondracki complains the police can't be everywhere, but police were everywhere the night Lucas Homan vanished. They were all over that area. They were on the look-out. And yet they saw nothing.
True, police didn't see a serial killer, but nor did they see an extremely drunk, yet extremely determined young man weaving through the park to his death.
It's hard to accept that by coincidence, Luke happened to have slipped through a crack in the system. If so -- then the system isn't nearly good enough, is it?
And the chief's other recommendations made years ago have similarly turned out to be unacceptable and woefully inadequate. Even if there had been cameras -- and they failed to show a very drunken student stumbling onto the bank -- one suspects Chief Kondracki would say the student must've coincidentally stayed just out of camera range.
But by all means -- Kondracki should put up gates, install cameras, put up lighting, and whatever else he can physically do to prevent this from happening again. None of that however, will change the horror of what's already happened.
It's time for La Crosse to get a new strategy, and I'm not talking about late-night "drunk buses" and anti-binge drinking posters. I'm talking about a strategy to confront the serial-killer that, real or imagined, is threatening the safety of the community.
The solution isn't building fences -- it's tearing down the wall that separates law enforcement from the people they've sworn to protect and serve.
Luke Homan
Too Drunk To Drown
According to La Crosse County Medical Examiner John Steers, tests on vitreous fluid taken from within the eye indicated 21-year-old Lucas Homan’s blood-alcohol concentration was an astounding 0.32 percent.
I understand Luke may have been drinking heavily. I understand he may have stumbled away from his friends unnoticed. I understand that once at water's edge, Luke may have accidentally fallen in and drowned. What I don't understand is -- how he got down to the river in the first place.
A guide published on the web charting the effects of alcohol lists the following conditions of an average person with an alcohol level between 0.25 and 0.40 percent:
StuporThe effects of an alcohol level between 0.35 and 0.50 percent are listed as:
General inertia; approaching loss of motor functions
Markedly decreased response to stimuli
Marked muscular incoordination; inability to stand or walk
Vomiting; incontinence
Impaired consciousness; sleep or stupor
Coma
Complete unconsciousness
Depressed or abolished reflexes
Subnormal body temperature
Incontinence
Impairment of circulation and respiration
Possible death
Not Another One
October 6,
2006
The family and friends who love Lucas Homan must be shocked and devastated. Many in the town of La Crosse Wisconsin have been stunned into silence. Reading the headlines about Homan, concerned citizens all over the nation are at a loss for words, except to ask: "Not another one?"
Of course, Luke was never thought of as "another one." He was always known as somebody quite special -- and quite talented. He was a former prep star at Brookfield Central High School, and had transferred to the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse in 2005 after playing basketball for two seasons at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Luke was out with his friends in downtown La Crosse -- drinking and celebrating the community's "Oktoberfest." The last time anyone saw him was early on Saturday morning, September 30. After that, the 6' 4'' athlete disappeared. He had gone somewhere and never come back.
Loved ones spent a horrific weekend searching for Luke. And no one knows what happened to him -- but on Monday, his body was found in the Mississippi river.
La Crosse police figure Homan got drunk and then accidentally drowned. The autopsy report, completed by Dr. Lindsey Thomas, indicates there were no signs of trauma, no signs of a struggle, no signs of foul play.
The one, huge, obvious sign of foul play is that for the last ten years, this same shocking story of a missing college student that turns up dead in a nearby river has played out again, and again, and again, and again in the La Crosse area.
The series of other drownings don't absorb the shock. The disappearance and death of Lucas Homan is a singular, stunning loss. Words fail. Students, friends, parents -- people who've followed this case and the many others like it -- have been rendered practically speechless.
But Police Chief Ed Kondracki had plenty to say. He told a local reporter: "We don't have enough officers to hold hands along the river shore. We can't anticipate where the next drowning is going to be, and unless something is done about binge drinking -- another drowning will occur."
Astounding.
Well, Chief Kondracki should know that community members are starting to find their voice. Folks have begun working to make sure there is not another one.
All I can say is -- if any of the loved ones of Lucas Homan should happen across this website, you should know that a great many people care about you and mourn your loss. Our thoughts are with you and will continue to be. We will not forget Luke. We will not dismiss this.
Luke is not "another one." He is special and unique, and he always will be.
Missing Med Student
September 25,
2006
In the weeks following the April 1 disappearance of Ohio State University medical student, Brian Shaffer, searchers combed the brush and bike path along the Olentangy river, from Lane Avenue to Confluence Park.
The missing student's father, Randall Shaffer, told reporters, "I don't want to find my son in the water someplace. I'm not saying he's there, and I pray to God he's not."
There was no reason to look in that particular place for clues. Brian had last been seen out at a bar with friends who were celebrating the start of spring break. Never the less, the area was searched and -- like every other place they'd looked -- authorities found nothing.
Brian Shaffer is just -- gone. The 27-year-old is 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighs about 170 pounds. He has hazel eyes and a tattoo of the Pearl Jam symbol on his upper right arm.
Police have no idea what could've happened. Shaffer's mother died shortly before he disappeared, and at one point, his father Randy suggested the stress of her death might have been too much for Brian. But it's now been half a year since anyone's heard from him. Family and friends are sure he didn't simply decide to take off. His car was parked at his apartment. His cell phone and credit cards have not been used.
Clint Florence is the last person to have seen Brian Shaffer. The two used to live together and were out bar-hopping till early on Saturday morning on April 1.
Florence told NBC-4 in Columbus that the men headed to the Ugly Tuna Saloon at about 9:15 PM. At about 10:30 Brian spoke with his girlfriend by phone. At 11:00 the men walked to the Short North Tavern, and at 11:40 they walked to another bar. Around 1:15 they returned to the Ugly Tuna.
Florence said while he was drinking, Brian periodically walked away to talk with some people he knew. Shaffer was last seen on surveillance cameras at about 2:00 AM.
"Brian got up with them. I am assuming he got up with them, walked out with them to talk with them on the foyer before going on the escalator . . . I called him that night and it went straight to voicemail. It was about 2 a.m. and -- no answer," Florence said.
At closing time, after looking for his friend, Clint Florence left the bar. "Of course, I regret now leaving, but I didn't think anything of it. I didn't think Brian -- that anything happened to him because he is known to walk away," Florence said.
Nobody wants to believe Brian met with foul play or had a fatal accident -- but he was certainly not known to stay away. Brian Shaffer's total disappearance has now become an agonizing mystery.
Randy Shaffer said vanishing is just not like his son and described him as an exceptional student, noting, "His idea of a bad grade is to get an 83. The last time my wife was here, he was in the top 10 of his class. I don't know where he's at now but not that far behind. He's such a smart kid."
Brian was supposed to leave that Monday morning for a spring break trip with his girlfriend, Alexis Waggoner. She immediately knew something strange had happened.
"I was kind of starting to worry Saturday night. And by Sunday morning when I hadn't heard anything, I was really thinking there was something wrong," said Waggoner, who then contacted his family and called police.
Wednesday, March
1, 2006
-- The St. Cloud Police Department said the body of missing St. Cloud State University student Scot Radel was found in the Mississippi River at about 1:45 PM. Chief Dennis Ballantine told reporters there was "no evidence of foul play," and that there were no obvious signs of injury. Radel's cell phone, keys, watch and wallet were found on his body.
"Now we have to figure out how he ended up being in that river. I don't know
if we'll ever find out why, but we will follow up on evidence that comes in."
-- Police Chief Ballantine
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"How could Scot Radel get disoriented on the streets in a town where he had been attending college for years? Why did he head for the river, blocks away from where he was last seen? How could he have tumbled down a riverside embankment where it would be difficult to fall into the river?" -- questions raised by Allan Radel in a March 3, 2006 Star-Tribune Article Allan Radel: "I think he was disoriented and got into a vehicle, either voluntarily or involuntarily. At some point, I believe Scot recognized he was in trouble. Obviously, he was overly intoxicated and disoriented. He was vulnerable. "I think once he recognized what was going on -- he was a pretty tough kid, a wrestler -- he managed to get away. He ran out of fear and maybe didn't know where he was going, even that he was going toward the river. He went rolling down that pretty steep hill. When he got to the bank, he didn't want to go back up toward who he was running away from. "Directly across the river is a lighted stairway. He's on the ice and heads toward it, not realizing there was open water ahead of him. He goes in the water and [swims] as far as he could -- he was a terrific swimmer, very strong. But the water was cold, he had shoes on. So he swam until he couldn't anymore. ". . . I believe predators are preying on students who are leaving the downtown bars in St. Cloud pretty intoxicated." |
"I'm disappointed his father feels that way.
There's absolutely no evidence anything like that is happening."
-- St. Cloud Police Sgt. Jerry Edblad
KSTP News in Minneapolis filed a report on February 18, 2006 with the headline:
"Jenkins Case May Not Be Closed"
University of Minnesota student
Chris Jenkins vanished on Halloween, 2002. His remains were recovered
in the Mississippi River four months later. Since no obvious signs of foul
play were found, detectives determined Chris' death to have been an accident.
Chris parents, Jan and Steve Jenkins, never felt Minneapolis police
did a thorough investigation. They don't believe their son simply got drunk,
walked into the river and accidentally drowned -- because no obvious signs
of an accident were found. The KSTP article lists some of the troubling
items:
The exact location of Chris'
body. "If he came from upstream, that points towards foul play," says Steve
Jenkins.
The condition of the shoes
and clothing. Jenkins commented, "His shirt was tucked in, and drowning victims'
shirts are not tucked in."
The exact poition of the body.
While most drowning victims float face down, Chris' body was on its back,
arms folded across the chest. "What this should say is, in our minds, there's
a red flag the size of Texas . . . Something's wrong with the picture," says
Jan Jenkins.
KSTP caught everyone off guard with word from Assistant
Police Chief Tim Dolan that the case is not completely closed. "It's fairly
cold. I can't get into specifics, but it's not as cold as others," Dolan
reports. "If we can ascertain where Chris may have entered, or may not, that's
all the better . . . Right now we're looking for all the information we can
get on that case."
Jan Jenkins is quoted as saying, "For the first time since Chris'
disappearance and death, I will feel as if his life -- his death -- have
been dignified by an investigation."
Research from visitors to this site has revealed several
names of young men who have inexplicably gone missing.
Two of those cases stand out as being situations that have
notable -- coincidental -- similarities to the other cases
mentioned on this web page.

Ryan Katcher
| Late on Nov. 5, 2000, Ryan
Katcher was driven to his Oakwood, Illinois home by a friend. He vanished.
Neither the University of Illinois sophomore nor his Ford F-150 truck have
ever been located. Gary Miller, Vermilion County sheriff's chief investigator commented on the investigation: "We don't suspect foul play (in Ryan's case), but we don't have enough information to rule out anything. We know he was taken home from a party by a friend and we know absolutely nothing after that about where he went . . . He was there and then he was gone and there are no clues. It's a total mystery." Ryan's mother, Linda Katcher Griffith is still searching for her son, who at the time was described as a 5-foot-6-inch, 160 pound, blond, blue-eyed, 19-year-old. |

Justin Hayduk
| Justin Hayduk, was
last seen in the early hours of March 10, 2001 in Morgantown, West Virginia
where he'd gone for spring break. He and a friend had been drinking at a
fraternity party and after leaving, they were stopped by a police officer.
Justin ran from the scene and then vanished. "You see a lot of things on a college campus on a Friday or Saturday night," West Virginia University's police chief, Bob Roberts commented. "We didn't have a reason to pursue him." When last seen, 18-year-old Justin was described as having brown hair and eyes, 140 pounds, 5 feet 7 inches tall, and wearing a tan vest over a white shirt, with blue jeans and cap. The only lead police had was the white baseball cap, discovered March 13, 2001 on a bank of the Monongahela River. Justin's parents, Mike and Cheryl Hayduk spent months searching for the University of Pittsburgh student. Then, on May 24, 2001, medical examiners in Charleston positively identified a body found in the Monongahela River as the missing freshman. Justin Hayduk was a 2000 graduate of Chambersburg High School and was attending college on academic scholarship. |
"They drank hard and partied
long, then stumbled into the night with a sense of bravado, clueless to the
danger ahead."
--
Richard
Meryhew's Star-Tribune article, "One last sip, One last step"
Clueless?
Scot Radel's
baseball cap
February 19,
2006
The La Crosse County Medical Examiner has carefully analyzed the phenomenon of missing/drowned students and concluded the coincidental deaths are just a big joke:
"Yes I believe all the evidence suggests that there is a KILLER amongst us. And these men are dying at the Killer's hands along with thousands of other victims every year, and that Killer has a name, his name is Al Cohol."
A February 11, 2006 article
in
Minneapolis'
Star-Tribune about the odd disappearance of Scot Radel includes quotes
from several other Midwest officials. Though none are quite as funny as the
La Crosse M.E., the public servants are similarly dismissive of the possibility
that these strange drownings are not simple drinking accidents.
Stearns County Sheriff John Sanner led the search for Josh Guimond,
the still missing St. John's University student. Sanner cites the idea that
many Midwest campuses are near a river. "It'd be no different than having
a university sitting at the edge of the Grand Canyon, and then all of a sudden
having these students fall to their death while sitting on the edge of the
Grand Canyon."
Gary Foster, Deputy Police Chief in Eau Claire, Wisconsin where several students
have vanished, figures "once they get disoriented, or get into an environment
or a riverbank or something that's really treacherous, bad things happen."
If it weren't for the seriousness of the issue, those comments would be laughable.
Generally speaking, all of the missing student's stories are alcohol-related,
but it is not clear what specific role alcohol played in each case.
Scot Radel had reportedly been drinking with friends the night he
went missing. Officials were quick to point out that alcohol was likely a
factor. But alcohol consumption alone can't explain away his sudden
disappearance.
Scot's family and friends describe him as an especially meticulous, trustworthy
and stable young man. They're certain he did not wander off.
Photos taken
of Scot shortly before he disappeared prove he was not falling down drunk. He
was not so "disoriented" and "clueless" that he wouldn't recognize a river. He was on the phone speaking with friends at the time he vanished.
Scot's roommate Tony Hartle, who has known Scot since kindergarten,
doesn't believe alcohol alone is behind his friend's disappearance. He gave
reporters his assessment based on the specific facts of the situation:
"I don't think he went freely. It wasn't a drunken stupor walk into the
river -- I'm not saying that's what happened -- I'm just saying there's another
key element. There's somebody else involved here. . . Somebody put him into
this situation."
The La Crosse M.E. may not agree, but Tony Hartle's words echo a conclusion
that many, many people who've seriously looked at these cases have come to.
Along with the alcohol, some other thing or some other person must be involved.
Tuesday, February
14, 2006
-- Police locate Scot Radel's baseball cap in the Mississippi River
near a dam by St. Cloud State University. Police Chief Dennis Ballentine
says he's confident Radel's body is in the river, but the search has been
called off because of unsafe ice. The river search likely won't resume until
spring.
"I know there is no way
my son simply walked out into the river . . .
There's more to the story than this. It doesn't end here."
-- Scot's father, Allan
Radel
Missing Persons
Report
On February 13, 2006 the
St. Cloud Times
reported there was nothing to report about Scot Radel, the St. Cloud
State University student who vanished the night of February 2. The only tidbit
of news was that footprints police had found near the river appeared to be
those of someone running.
Scot's family is worried sick. His dad, Allan Radel said, "Not knowing where
your son is -- this is hell." The missing 21-year-old may be alive and well,
but after a week and a half of intense searches, it's hard to hold out hope
for a happy ending.
"I think something happened to him downtown on Thursday night. What happened
to him, I don't know," said Jeff Radel, Scot's brother.
St. Cloud police seem just as baffled.
"Let's be honest, we're getting to the point where something bad has happened,
whether accidental or otherwise. But we have absolutely no evidence whatsoever
that he was attacked or abducted or anything like that," said Police
Chief Dennis Ballantine. "Usually in a case like this someone would say
'oh we saw him here, we saw him there.' We're not even getting those. It's
like he just vanished."
Along with the brief Radel
article, the St. Cloud paper featured a story with the headline:
"Heaps of Overtime Drain Police Force." Reporter Kari
Petrie notes that in 2005, the department had almost 20,000 hours of overtime
-- the equivalent of more than nine additional full-time officers. Asked
about lost money and morale, Chief Ballantine commented, "It's absolutely
a huge concern."
The juxtaposition of the Times' two news items point to the tremendous
difficulties involved in solving missing person cases.
About 200,000 American citizens go missing every year. Some run away, some
lose their way, some are taken away. Most are quickly found. But many people
who disappear -- especially young adults -- are never recovered, mainly due
to inefficient and ineffective law enforcement.
Family and friends of the missing face three major obstacles.
Problem #1: It's not a crime to go missing. People aren't obligated
to be where others expect them to be. Overworked, understaffed police departments
have their hands full with crimes, so unless the missing person is a small
child or there are obvious signs of foul play, a reported disappearance will
not be a priority.
Problem #2: Poorly trained police mishandle missing person cases in
the critical first 24 hours of the investigation. Also -- authorities often don't
do an aggressive follow-up.
Problem #3: Information about people who've vanished is not sent to
the appropriate central data bases, or never sent at all. Even when records
and reports are properly placed into the computers run by the Justice
Department's
National
Crime Information Center, it's often a meaningless gesture. The system
is terribly outdated and practically useless to busy detectives.
The solution -- at least part of it -- is for people to communicate their
concerns to police, politicians and the press. It would also be helpful if
responsible citizens donated their attention, time and money to a local or
national missing persons foundation.
"I want my son back, he's
a good kid. I love him dearly. We just want him back and we want some
help."
-- Allan Radel
Making A
Connection
Where
is Scot Radel?
February 6,
2006
The last contact Scot Baek Radel made with his roommates was by cell
phone, on Thursday, February 2 at around at 11:30 PM. He's been missing ever
since. The 21-year-old St. Cloud State University junior is described as
a Korean male, 5-foot-5, 145 pounds with brown hair.
While most of the students counted among the Midwest missing/drowned cases
have been White males, the developing mystery of Scot Radel is strikingly
similar to their stories in other ways. For one thing, the noted high school
wrestler was not the type of person to wander off alone. Danielle Saufferer,
Scot Radel's girlfriend said, "He always called when he said he was going
to call. He always told everybody where he was going and he was always with
his friends."
St. Cloud police say searchers found several shoe prints along the frozen
Mississippi River that may have belonged to Scot.
Minnesota's
WCCO-TV
News is reporting the following:
Radel was supposed to meet his roommates at the Press Bar and was asking them for directions, police said. Radel told his roommates he had left McRudy's Bar and Pub and could see the Paramount sign and a bank from where he was standing at the time of the call.