cover of episode S1 E3: The One Who Got Away

S1 E3: The One Who Got Away

2016/9/13
logo of podcast In The Dark

In The Dark

Chapters

Jared Scheierl recounts his abduction and assault by a man who later became a prime suspect in the Jacob Wetterling case, highlighting the chilling details and the failure of law enforcement to connect the dots.

Shownotes Transcript

He looked lean and sleek and surprisingly put together.

Were it not for the shackles at his wrists and ankles, he might have been walking onto a yacht. I noticed, as he made coffee, that his knife rack was shaped like a human body, stuck through with blades at various points. There were only two possibilities. The money had been stolen,

or it had never existed. Subscribe at newyorker.com slash dark, and you'll get access to all of it, plus a free New Yorker tote bag. I must say, the very best tote bag around. That's newyorker.com slash dark. Previously on In the Dark...

On the outskirts of his hometown of St. Joseph, a young boy's mysterious disappearance. And he looked at me and then he grabbed Jacob and he told me to run as fast as I could in the woods or he'd shoot. 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.

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. I remember just leaving out of there just so angry because they weren't listening to anything that I had to say. We are here today because of the perseverance of the investigative team. We got the truth. The Wetterling family can bring him home. Earlier this year, I went out to meet up with a guy named Jared Shirell.

Jared is 40 now. He lives in a house in central Minnesota, down a long dirt driveway with a big friendly black dog. It's peaceful here. 80 acres of land, old trees, the Crow River running through. I came here to talk to Jared because Jared, or more specifically what happened to Jared, was most likely the single best clue law enforcement had in the case of Jacob Wetterling.

This is In the Dark, an investigative podcast from APM Reports. I'm Madeline Barron. In this podcast, we're looking at what went wrong in the investigation of the kidnapping of an 11-year-old boy named Jacob Wetterling in central Minnesota in 1989. Today, we're going to see just how close law enforcement got to solving this case. So close, they even sat face-to-face with the man who killed Jacob and then...

they let him go. Jared Shirell grew up in a small town called Cold Spring, just 10 miles southwest of St. Joseph, where the Wetterlings lived. Cold Spring was a safe, rural community at

Everybody knows everybody. Attended church every Sunday. Jared grew up biking around town, playing outside a lot. People thought of Cold Spring as a safe place. And one night in 1989, about nine months before Jacob Wetterling was kidnapped, Jared went ice skating with a bunch of friends. He was 12 at the time. And we, after ice skating...

We decided to walk down to the side cafe to get a chocolate malt. Jared was with his best friend, Corey Eskelson. Corey still lives in Stearns County. And earlier this year, I went out to meet up with him at his house to talk about that night. After having the malts, some kids got drove away in cars out front. And Jared and I, there's a little alleyway out back, and we walked through the alleyway. And the one thing that I will always capture...

It was Jared asked me to walk him home and I said no. It was probably 9, 9.30 when I started walking home and as I was walking a car approached me. It was a blue car. The driver stopped and asked Jared for directions. So as I started giving this guy directions and at the same time I was on a sidewalk and I was walking towards the vehicle the

The man had got out of the car, and when I was in range, he grabbed me at the shoulders, and he said, get the fuck in the car. I have a gun, and I'm not afraid to use it. The man told Jared to lie down in the back seat and pull his stocking cap over his eyes. He started driving. There was a walkie-talkie-type scanner in the car. Jared thought he heard local law enforcement dispatch come across it. At some point, the man shut it off.

He drove for 10 or 15 minutes. Jared tried to keep track of where they were going by counting left and right turns. He paid attention to when the car crossed over train tracks. And then the man turned onto a gravel road and stopped. It was dark, but Jared thought he could make out the lights of a nearby town in the distance.

This phrase, necessary details, is one that Jared uses a lot when he gets to the part of his story about exactly what the man did to him.

He had said, um...

It's okay to talk about this, but if they come close to finding out who I am, I'll find you and kill you. Jared's family was wondering where he was. Where the hell would he be? It doesn't take an hour to get from the restaurant to the house. This is Jared's twin brother, Jed. He came through the door hysterical. That was crazy. What was he saying? I wouldn't want to comment on that.

Their parents called the police, and Jared left with his dad to go down to the station. And my dad gave my older brother a shotgun, and he said, if anybody comes through that patio door or through that front door, you pull the trigger.

And that's, I mean, you gave that responsibility to his son. And, I mean, that's how it changes a family. You know, at first in life there's no violence. And you think life is happy-go-lucky and it's peaceful and life is great. And then things happen. Life changes. All of a sudden you realize, you know what, there's evil in the world. Jared didn't go to school the next day. And his best friend, Corey, didn't know why. I had no idea.

FBI agents came to my classroom. I had no clue who they were or what they were doing. I didn't know they were FBI. They asked for me. And I walked into the hallway and they asked for my hat. And I, sure, you need my hat? Okay. I thought they were maybe going to make some hats or something. Well, it ended up that the hat that I had was a Cold Spring hockey hat. And Jared said it looked

or resembled the hat that the abductor had on. Corey was the last person to see Jared before he was assaulted. He was also out in the dark that night. So our producer, Samara, wondered about something. So I know that you said the FBI came and took your hat after Jared was abducted. Did they ever question you in any way? 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. Investigators from the Stearns County Sheriff's Office did try to find the man who had assaulted Jared. Law enforcement records show that Jared described the man as short, maybe 5'6", 5'7", about 170 pounds. He wore black army boots and camouflage fatigues and a military-style watch. His voice was deep and raspy. He drove a dark blue car.

Officers had Jared try to retrace the route the man drove that night. It's sad, the picture, but in order to do that, I had to lay in the backseat of the squad car with my eyes covered and just go off my memory. And where are we going now? And where are we going now? They traced it to a spot off a main road, Highway 23, somewhere in between Cold Spring and a small town called Painesville.

Three days after Jared was assaulted, a deputy from the Stearns County Sheriff's Office came up with a name of a possible suspect. A man from Painesville named Danny Heinrich. At the time, Heinrich was 25. He was short, about 5'5", and stocky, and drove a blue car. He dropped out of high school in the 10th grade and worked a bunch of low-paying jobs. He was a member of the National Guard. He lived with his mom.

and he'd had several run-ins with the law, all for minor and kind of bumbling crimes. One time, Heinrich broke into a consignment store, looking for money to pay off some gambling debts. And when an officer got there, he found Heinrich hiding behind some boxes. Heinrich was arrested, and he ended up confessing to another burglary in town that same night. Heinrich told the officer, quote, "'I don't know what got into me. I don't know why I do these things.'"

Heinrich had a few DWIs, too. At one stop, a cop noticed Heinrich had a police scanner in his car that he was using to monitor Stearns County Sheriff's Office radio transmissions. The officer confiscated it. So when Jared described a short, stocky man with camouflage fatigues on driving a small, dark blue car with a scanner inside, to the deputies, that sounded a whole lot like Danny Heinrich.

They put together a photo lineup of Heinrich and five other guys. Jared ended up picking out two people who he thought somewhat resembled his abductor.

One of them was Heinrich. So the next day, two detectives from the sheriff's office found Heinrich's car parked outside a plastics company where he worked. Jared had described the car as having a luggage rack and a blue interior. But when the officers went over to look, they noticed that Heinrich's car did not have a luggage rack, and the inside was a grayish color. They didn't charge Heinrich. They didn't charge anyone. The case remained unsolved.

Jared didn't know it at the time, but he wasn't the only one who'd been attacked by a strange man in Stearns County. In the years leading up to his abduction, from 1986 to 1988, in the town just down the road, the town of Painesville, the town where Danny Heinrich lived, boys were being grabbed off the street by a strange man in the dark.

I talked to one of the guys who reported the attacker to police as a kid. His name is Chris Bertelsen. He was 12 or 13 at the time.

We went around a corner by a people's house where they had a real thick, dark row of, I think they were spruce trees. And we came around the corner and

Chris couldn't get a good look at the man. Yeah.

I've read some of the police reports from these attacks. A lot of them were destroyed years ago. But from the ones that remain and the interviews I've done, it's clear these attacks were all pretty similar. A short and stocky man would jump out of the dark and try to grab a boy and grope him.

Sometimes the man wore a mask. Some of the boys were riding their bikes. Others were just walking. One of the boys was a paper boy out on his route. Most of the attacks happened at night. One boy said the man's voice was low and static-filled. Another said it was a deep whisper. Several of the boys said the man asked them their ages or what grade they were in. Sometimes the man would issue a warning, don't move or I'll shoot. We were all afraid, like, who's next?

I mean, it was pretty systematic. It was a group of us who hung around together and hung around downtown. To be marked like that is terrifying. And so we almost had sort of a feeling like we got to take care of each other. You know, we got to watch out for each other. We were very concerned. The police in Painesville tried their best to solve these assaults.

There were front-page articles about them in the local paper. One sergeant told the paper, quote, After this guy grabs the boys, he tells them, don't turn around or I'll blow your head off. People were so concerned that the cops even considered imposing a curfew. Instead, they decided to just keep warning parents and kids, if a strange man approaches you, scream and run away as fast as you can.

You know, I never forget one of the other victims telling me the molester got me. And he described what happened and, you know, it was just, you know, heart-wrenching.

I mean, I'll never forget that. But we all had knives. Once this happened more than one time, I would suspect that just about every kid had a knife. I mean, that's how we lived for that year and a half, two years. I mean, it was terrifying. The attacks in Painesville were never solved.

Jared Shirell's family never saw the articles in the Painesville paper. They never knew about the other boys. Jared thought he was the only one. He started having dreams of being chased by a big black dog, and he'd wake up panicked and sweating. I think I slept on my parents' bedroom floor for the first year. You know, the level of fear that you go through, the emotions or anxieties that you learn to overcome, it's just so much more than just a dream.

Nine months passed, and then, in October of 1989, Jared heard that another boy had been kidnapped by a strange man. That boy's name was Jacob Wetterling, and he lived just 10 miles away. Jacob was also kidnapped on the side of a road while heading home after dark. He was with a brother and a friend when it happened. The man told the other boys to run away and don't look back or he'd shoot. There were details that I didn't...

The Jacob kidnapping seemed like almost a repeat of the Jared kidnapping.

And the night Jacob was kidnapped, the name Danny Heinrich was already in the files of the Stearns County Sheriff's Office. Not just in the files. One of the deputies on the scene that night, a detective named Doug Pierce, had investigated Jared's case just nine months earlier. Detective Pierce had talked to Jared, shown Jared the lineup with Heinrich, and even gone to look at Heinrich's car.

When Jacob Wetterling was abducted, Detective Pierce was one of the officers who took the statements from the two other kids who were with Jacob that night, the statements that described the abductor and how it happened. We tried to talk to Doug Pierce, but we weren't able to reach him. Here's why I think that information that night was so important. It's not just that Jacob's abduction seemed similar to another crime.

It's that this kind of crime, the kidnapping of a child by a stranger, is among the rarest of all crimes. And here in this one county in central Minnesota, it had happened twice in one year. But according to what we know from the documents that have been released and the best recollections of law enforcement who I talked to, no one went to look for Danny Heinrich in those first few critical hours after Jacob was kidnapped.

After that first night, as the investigation ramped up, investigators began to take a close look at the earlier kidnapping of Jared. They talked to Jared over and over. They would go to his school and pull him out of class. The kids in the class were taking notice of me coming in and out of class. And although we were protecting my identity...

Word was getting around within Cold Spring that I was that boy. Jared said investigators told him he was their best shot at finding Jacob because the man who took Jacob was the same man who took him. So they kept pressing Jared to remember more. Who does he look like? If you had to compare him to somebody else in the community, who does he look like?

Who does it resemble? One time, Jared told investigators that the man who assaulted him kind of looked like his 6th grade teacher. He didn't think it was his 6th grade teacher. He was just trying to come up with a description. Jared was just 13. And Jared's best friend, Corey, said the whole thing got pretty confusing. The teacher uprooted his family from Cold Spring and moved out of the area due to all the pressure that he got.

And it was not this guy. Jared just described him as looking like this guy. And they bugged that guy to the point where he was gone. Jared said all of this got so overwhelming and so stressful. To the point where I broke down. You know, there was one particular interview. It was a hard one. They brought me into a room and my parents weren't allowed in the room. And I was drilled with

all the necessary details and then questioned in regards to how certain I was on those details and it led into you know who this person is and you know as much as I wanted to provide the answer I didn't know the answer and after time and time again me not knowing the name um

I finally broke down in tears and came out of that room, and my parents had seen me and said, we're done. After that interview, Jared's family ended up moving out of town. They wanted to get away from all the stress and questioning about Jared's assault. So they moved to a place they thought was more peaceful, calmer, a town called Painesville, the town where Danny Heinrich lived.

So Jared couldn't remember every last detail about the man. But what he could remember turned out to matter a great deal, because those details were very similar to how Jacob Wetterling's brother and friend described the man who took Jacob. Law enforcement became so certain the cases were linked that they decided to announce it to the public.

New evidence tonight leads the FBI to believe that Jacob Wetterling's kidnapper may have struck before. Agents say there are many similarities between Jacob's abduction and the kidnapping and sexual assault of a Cold Spring boy in January. In December of 1989, authorities held a news conference. The top FBI agent on the case, Jeff Jamar, said without any hesitation,

that the abduction of Jacob Wetterling and the abduction of the Cold Spring boy, Jamar didn't use Jared's name, were connected. It was the same man. We knew from the very beginning. The question was, how precise are the facts? How well, how good was the witness? How much do we know about what happened that night? It's taken this long to get that down. And this is where the case against Danny Heinrich for the kidnapping of Jacob Wetterling starts to build.

about a month and a half after Jacob was taken. Two days after the news conference, investigators go to talk to Heinrich. They ask him, "Where were you on the night of October 22, 1989, the night Jacob was kidnapped?" "I can't remember," Heinrich says. "So? No alibi." Heinrich agrees to give authorities a sample of his hair. He agrees to turn over his shoes. He agrees to let officers take the tires off his car.

Law enforcement compares the shoes and tires to prints and tracks found near the abduction site. They get the results back. And to use the language of forensic scientists, the shoe print was similar and the tire tracks were consistent. In other words, not a slam dunk, but promising. Investigators even go back to Jared and have him sit in Heinrich's old car. And Jared says it looks like the right one. He tells them he wouldn't change a thing.

One of the lead FBI agents on the case back then, Al Garber, told me authorities were watching Heinrich 24-7 for weeks. We pulled out all the stops.

We turned him upside down. Authorities get a search warrant for Heinrich's father's house. Heinrich had moved there shortly after Jacob was kidnapped. Inside the house, they find black boots, camouflage pants, two radio scanners, and several locked trunks. Inside one of the trunks is a photograph of a boy in his underwear and another photo of a boy coming out of a shower with a towel wrapped around him.

I can't tell you anything more about what those photos looked like, because law enforcement doesn't have them. During the search, Heinrich objected to the officers seizing the photos. According to documents filed last year, he told them the photos, quote, just didn't look right. So law enforcement let him keep the photos. And Heinrich later burned them. The investigation continued. Heinrich appeared in the lineup.

Officers brought in Jared, and although Jared wasn't able to pick out anyone for sure, he did say two of the men kind of looked similar to the man who assaulted him. One of those men was Heinrich. Then the FBI connected a fiber found on Jared's snowsuit to a fiber sample taken from the seat of Heinrich's old car.

On February 9, 1990, about three and a half months after Jacob was kidnapped, law enforcement decided it was time to bring in Heinrich to see if they could force a confession out of him for the abductions of both Jared Shirell and Jacob Wetterling. They sent in an FBI agent named Steve Gilkerson. We felt that he was the key to the case at that time.

That he did it. Yep. So Gilkerson and the other officers got to work preparing for the interrogation. Three people from the FBI Behavioral Science Unit in Quantico came out to help us prepare for the interview. I mean, that's how important it was.

Gilkerson wouldn't say much about what the FBI profilers recommended. I don't want to go into too much detail because criminals might be listening to whatever you do here. But you want to prepare the room setting in a certain way. FBI agent Al Garber was also involved in getting things set up. The

The profilers told us where to put certain furniture and where to seat him and where to seat the investigators. They used a small interview room. They put an American flag inside and a floor lamp and some chairs.

They got a file and stuffed it full of papers and wrote Danny Heinrich's name on it and placed it conspicuously on a desk. We didn't understand what they were doing, but we thought we would try it. Why not? The goal was to intimidate Heinrich, to make it seem like they already had a ton of evidence against him, that they already knew he did it, so he should just confess already. So they brought in Danny Heinrich. Al Garber's first impression of him wasn't much. Average, everyday Joe Heinrich.

I don't know. Nothing stood out for me about him. Did he seem smart? No, not particularly. Not particularly ignorant either. You know, just an average person, I thought. Gilkerson, the other FBI agent, remembers the interview lasted almost two hours. We accused him. We had evidence that he did it. We tried a number of different ways to get him to talk to us about it.

Heinrich was held overnight in jail. But the next day, the county attorney decided they didn't have enough evidence to charge Heinrich with anything. So they let him go.

And Al Garber told me there wasn't much more they could do with Heinrich after that. It goes like this. You investigate as much as you can. You do everything you can think of. You either get the evidence, you find that the person conclusively didn't do it, or you just have no more to do. So you have to leave that suspect. You can't stay in the suspect with nothing to do, nothing more to do forever. Sometimes you just can't get it.

I kept coming back to this moment, the moment they let Heinrich go. And I wondered, what else could they have done? So I asked a lot of the investigators who worked on the case back then about this. They all told me the same thing. They needed something that could hold over Heinrich, another charge, something they could work with, to make a deal. And the way everyone talked to me about it, there just wasn't anything. All they had were two cases, Jacob and Jared. No one mentioned the Painesville cases.

That seems strange. So I asked Steve Gilkerson about it. He's the FBI agent who interrogated Heinrich. Did you ever hear about the assaults on the boys in Painesville back then? No, no. If you had known that, what do you think would have been different? Well, I certainly would have interviewed those kids, you know, trying to come up with more evidence and all. I wonder if it just got lost somehow, you know, with all the leads coming in and all the activity. Yeah.

I don't know. I know we reached a point after the investigation there, we had really nothing at that point. We let Henry go.

The top FBI agent on the case back then, Special Agent in Charge Jeff Jamar, said he couldn't recall any of this Painesville stuff, but that it would have been really helpful. I said it more than several times during our press conferences that we had. If you're a victim or you're in a police department or anything else and you have cases similar to this, tell us about them.

So I told Jeff Jamar about the Painesville cases. He said that kind of information was exactly what they were looking for. That's one of those instances where we had something to hold over his head. Maybe more investigation where he lived and more victims. If we could have found them and piled up cases of abuse by him then, to me it's just something, again, where we failed. It still bothers me.

But law enforcement had heard about the Painesville assaults. We know this for sure, because in the limited batch of documents that are available to the public in the Wetterling case, there's a mention of the police chief of Painesville telling the investigators about the assaults in early January of 1990. The police chief even told them the name of the man he believed should be considered a suspect in those assaults, Danny Heinrich.

Chris, one of the kids from Haynesville, made the connection between the cases in his own mind right away. I'll never forget that. I was walking on St. Germain in St. Cloud, and a girl ran up to me and handed me a piece of paper, like a flyer with his picture on it. And she said, this little boy was abducted and St. Joe was taken. And St. Joe was taken.

And I remember I had like a flashback. You know, when she said that to me, I thought immediately it was a trigger for me.

And I remember thinking, you know, is this the same guy? I mean, I was thinking, could it be? Is this possible? You know, how does this happen? And did anyone from law enforcement on the Wetterling case ever reach out and contact you? No. Chris told me he and his dad went to law enforcement themselves and gave a statement to the Wetterling investigators about the Painesville assaults. He can't remember the names of the investigators. He was just a teenager at the time.

I had expectations that this was hot. Like, my lead, this stuff in Painesville, you can't ignore this, guys. I mean, I went in with that mentality because I thought, look, this is very similar. Jacob was on a bike. We were on bikes. Just lots of things. Chris said the investigators didn't seem all that interested.

They didn't ask him to do a lineup or to look at any photos. In fact, they never called him again. I think we all kind of gave up on them taking a look. By February of 1990, law enforcement had struck out with Danny Heinrich. There were lots of reasons to think he did it, but no solid evidence. But there was something else they could have done. At the same time, all over Stearns County, there was a massive search underway for Jacob.

It was one of the largest searches for any missing person in the history of the United States. The Stearns County Sheriff's Office was in charge, but this search involved hundreds of officers from many agencies and thousands of volunteers. Steve Gilkerson, the FBI agent from back then, told me the search went far beyond just the town where Jacob was kidnapped. We did, oh, well...

Gilkerson told me they even searched the area around the town of Cold Spring, where Jared Shirell lived. The

But Gilkerson told me they did not look for Jacob in the tiny town of Painesville, a town of just 2,300, just about two square miles, the town where all those boys had been attacked, the town where Heinrich lived. We didn't search any of that area at that time. About a year after Jacob went missing, late one night, around midnight, Danny Heinrich went for a walk to a spot just a third of a mile or so outside of downtown Painesville.

the site where he had buried Jacob Wetterling's body. We don't know what led Heinrich to go back there, or what he was planning to do. All we know is what Heinrich said last week in his confession. He brought a flashlight and a garbage bag and a collapsible shovel. He shined the flashlight over the grave, and he saw something. Jacob's red jacket. As he moved closer, he saw something else. Bones, just lying there on the ground, as though the site had been uncovered.

So Heinrich gathered the bones and the jacket and everything else he could find and put them into the garbage bag. Then he walked across the street and used the collapsible shovel to dig a hole about two feet deep. Then Heinrich put the bones in the hole and then the jacket, and then he covered up the hole and left. The remains wouldn't be found for 26 years. Heinrich stayed in Painesville for a long time, and he didn't stop being interested in boys there.

I found a sheriff's report from 1991. A Painesville cop had spotted a tan Buick driving around town, following paperboys on their morning routes. And the cop had asked a Stearns County sheriff's deputy to check it out. The deputy followed the car and realized the driver was Heinrich. But the deputy decided no further action could be taken by the sheriff's office. He wrote a report, and that was it.

Jared Shirell grew up. He starred on his high school wrestling team. He played football. And after high school, he moved to Alaska and got a job drilling for a gold prospecting company. He came back home to Painesville, got married, raised kids, got divorced, and ended up buying his childhood home there from his father before he died. But for all that time, Jared stayed pretty quiet about what had happened to him as a kid. He remembered the man's words. If they ever come close to finding me, I'll kill you.

And then one day, about three years ago, Jared got a Facebook message from a blogger named Joy Baker. She'd come across some old newspaper articles about the assaults in Painesville. She wanted to know if Jared knew about them. You can't imagine my eyes when I had seen that and just thinking, I live here. Jared had never heard of the assaults before. And at that moment, Jared realized something. Maybe the man who attacked all these kids in Painesville

was the same man who attacked him, and even the same man who kidnapped Jacob Wetterling. He thought, maybe I could find all these guys who were assaulted and ask them what they remember and try to piece it all together to figure out who this man is. I told myself, I said, I'm going to give it 110%. This is it. As much as I've done, this is it. And if the answer's out there and it pertains to any of this, then I'm going to find it.

Jared thought about how to get started. And then he remembered something an older boy had told him when he first moved to town after he'd been assaulted. The boy had said, look out for Chester the Molester. At the time, Jared thought it was a joke. But 20-some years later, reading these stories, Jared wondered about that comment. So he got back in touch with the boy, now a man, and asked him what he'd met.

The man told him he wasn't joking. There had been this creepy guy who jumped out of the bushes in his parents' yard and attacked a kid. Jared asked the man for any names of kids who'd been attacked.

Within the first week, I talked to one of the victims. I approached one of them and just got details of his attack. How do you start that conversation? You start with your own story. Okay. You know, I approached him and said, hey, I just want to ask you a few questions. I'm going to tell you something about me, and if you're comfortable enough, maybe you share some things with me.

Jared kept talking to men in town. One person would lead to another. And they knew who I was, they were comfortable talking, and it led to a domino effect. One of the guys Jared found was Chris. And so he called...

I don't even know how he got my number. He asked my name, you know, he said, oh, this is Chris. You know, are you the are you the one that was, you know, involved in Painesville? And it was just it was like a ghost. Like what? Yes, I was. Jared, Chris and all these guys started swapping stories about what they remembered about the man who assaulted them.

And a lot of these stories sounded pretty similar to what happened to Jared and Jacob, like it really was the same guy. For Jared, it was comforting in a way, to share the same experience with so many other men. For so long, he thought he was the only one who escaped. Jared and all these men formed a kind of brotherhood. They were on a mission, to find out what had happened to them, and by doing that, to try to find out what had happened to Jacob Wetterling.

Jared gave us a voice. And, you know, we had gone through this once. And as you can imagine, it's an up and down. You know, you hope you're going to catch the sky and things like that. And then they don't catch them. They don't catch them. They don't catch them. Years go by after Jacob.

Jared and several other men got back in touch with the investigators on the Wetterling case. They wanted law enforcement to see what they saw, that these cases in this one county in just a few-year period almost certainly were done by the same guy. Jared said he hoped to find answers for Jacob's parents. And I was, I felt like I was Jacob's strongest hope.

Finally, two years ago, investigators went back and looked at those Painesville cases. They looked at Jared's case, too. And it's hard to know for sure, because most of the Wetterling case file is still sealed. But the best I can tell is that this effort, by Jared and by all these men from Painesville, is what led authorities to go back to the man who was in front of them all along, Danny Heinrich.

Chris, the guy from Painesville, told me the way he sees it, it shouldn't have taken so long. They had all of that. None of it was new.

None of it is new. Stearns County, the FBI, they've all had all of this. None of this was new. And once authorities made the decision to go back to focusing on Heinrich, things moved pretty quickly. Authorities still had a hair sample from Heinrich from all those years ago. They sent it off to a lab, and it came back as a DNA match to Jared's clothing. They used that match to get a search warrant for Heinrich's house to try to find evidence of Jacob Wetterling. But they didn't find any.

What they did find was some child pornography, so they charged Heinrich with that and threw him in jail. Authorities told Jared about the DNA match. After a quarter century, Jared finally had an answer from law enforcement. But there was a catch. It's Danny Heinrich, but because of statutes and limitations, we can't prosecute him in your case. That made me angry. You know, that made me feel like...

I've worked hard to get to here, to find this answer, and I get the answer, but I don't get prosecution. And it's not fair. It's not justice. Jared's brother, Jed, took the news hard. I'm just like, what? We lived here the whole time and he's just down the damn road all those years, you know? And it's like, what?

Throughout all the years of wondering and not knowing, and then all of a sudden, here's your answer, but there's not a damn thing you can do about it. Law enforcement officials haven't said anything publicly about why it took so long to connect the dots to Heinrich. And Chris, the guy from Painesville, says that's one of the things that bothers him the most. I just feel like it's, yeah, I just feel like they haven't said there was anything wrong.

Last month, the U.S. attorney decided to make Heinrich a deal. Show us where the body of Jacob is, and you won't be charged with killing him. And we'll drop all but one of the charges of child pornography against you. You won't spend the rest of your life in prison. Under the deal, Heinrich will serve 17 to 20 years. He'll be in his early 70s when he gets out.

It was a highly unusual deal for a federal prosecutor to make. It almost never happens. And in Minnesota, it made some people angry. So I called up the U.S. attorney, Andy Lugar, to ask him why he made a deal like this. We had belief, but not evidence, before he told us. So my job, under all of these awful circumstances, with no really great choices...

was to do two things. Put him behind bars for a long time and get the answers that this family and the state of Minnesota have been looking for for almost 27 years. So it's the best deal that could have been made. In my view, it's the best deal that was available. Heinrich took the deal. And on Wednesday, August 31st, Danny Heinrich led officers to the spot just outside of downtown Painesville.

Jacob had been there the whole time. Next time on In the Dark. Investigators say the kidnapping that occurred here in Cold Spring is just now coming to the forefront because of the overwhelming number of leads. The FBI says it took so long to connect the two cases because of the overwhelming amount of information it has to process. We've been running so many white cars down and red cars down and tan station wagons and vans and

We've been just getting so tremendous amount of calls in here. What can they, the Wetterlings, do? Are they, in a sense, powerless now to the whim, the whimsy, the awful capriciousness of this madman? That would be my opinion. Sunday, 7.24 p.m. I just want to tell you that Jacob's all right. You have Jacob? Yes.

I would say this is really unusual. This strikes me as a very bad idea. In the Dark is produced by Samara Freemark. The associate producer is Natalie Jablonski. Significant additional reporting for this episode by Jennifer Vogel. In the Dark is edited by Catherine Winter, with help from Hans Butow. The editor-in-chief of APM Reports is Chris Worthington.

Web editors are Dave Peters and Andy Cruz. The videographer is Jeff Thompson. Additional reporting by Curtis Gilbert, Will Kraft, Tom Scheck, and Emily Havik. Our theme music is composed by Gary Meister. This episode was mixed by Johnny Vince Evans.

There's a lot more that we couldn't fit into this episode, so please visit our website, inthedarkpodcast.org. You can read stories about the DNA evidence in this case and why it wasn't tested right away, and find out more about how unusual the plea deal with Heinrich was. And you can watch a video of Jared Shirell talking about his search for answers, as well as find out about places to get help if you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted.

He killed at least 19 people during the 1980s in South Africa. Very dark times. People were desperate. We were looking for him. We couldn't find him. And nobody knew where he was. Every single one of his victims was black. He reached such a stage where he was now hunting. World of Secrets from the BBC World Service. Season 3, The Apartheid Killer. Search for World of Secrets wherever you get your BBC podcasts.

I want to go deeper.

And that's where my podcast, Crime Story, comes in. Every week, I go behind the scenes with the creators of the best in true crime. I chat with the host of Scamanda, Teacher's Pet, Bone Valley, the list goes on. For the insider scoop, find Crime Story in your podcast app. From PR.