Jacob Erwin Wetterling (born February 17, 1978 - ?) was a boy from St. Joseph, Minnesota who was kidnapped from his hometown at the age of 11 on October 22, 1989. His fate remains unknown.
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Kidnapping
Jacob, his brother, and a friend were bicycling home from a convenience store when a masked gunman came out of a driveway and ordered the boys to throw their bikes into a ditch and lie down on the ground. He asked each boy his age. Jacob's brother and friend were told to run toward a nearby wooded area and not look back or else he would shoot them. After a short run, both boys did look back and saw the gunman grab Jacob by the elbow and walk him away. As of 2009, the whereabouts of Jacob and the gunman are unknown.
Continuing investigation
The investigation into Jacob's abduction continues. In 2004, some new reports appeared in the local press. A long-held belief that the abductor got away in a car was abandoned. It was also revealed that ten months prior to the Wetterling abduction another boy had been kidnapped, placed into a car, and sexually assaulted before being released. The modus operandi was similar to that in the Wetterling case: the man used a gun and upon releasing the boy told him to run and not look back or else he would be shot. That incident occurred ten miles from the location where Jacob, his brother, and friend were stopped. [1]
The Charley Project has sketches of a man believed to have abducted Jacob and sexually assaulted the other boy in 1989. [2]
In early 2009, Milwaukee police discovered child pornography, and alleged video of Wetterling taken before the abduction in the home of Vernon Seitz, 62, of the St. Francis area. Seitz had died in his home, but officers asked for additional assistance after the pornography was discovered. Along with the child pornography, articles involving missing children and maps of the cities those children were missing from. [3]
Advocacy
Four months after Jacob's abduction, his parents, Jerry and Patty Wetterling, formed the Jacob Wetterling Foundation, an advocacy group for children's safety. In 1994, the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act, more simply known as the Jacob Wetterling Act, was passed in his honor. It was the first law to institute a state sex-offender registry.[4] The law has been amended a few times, most famously by Megan's Law in 1996.
The Bridge of Hope is named in honor of Jacob. Patty Wetterling ran unsuccessfully for U.S. Representative from the Sixth Congressional District of Minnesota in 2004 and 2006.
Jacob is a featured child in the Polly Klaas Foundation.
See also
References
- ^ Steve Irsay, Court TV (c. 2002), The Search for Jacob
- ^ "The Charley Project". "Jacob Erwin Wetterling". http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/w/wetterling_jacob.html. Retrieved on June 28 2007.
- ^ "Child Porn, Cannibalistic Texts Found in Dead Man's Home" (c. 2009), [1]
- ^ Ramirez, Jessica. "The Abductions That Changed America", Newsweek, 29 January 2007, pp. 54–55.
External links
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