Nicholas Hietpas and his dog, from nearby Appleton WI, have been missing for over a year. Being early spring when he went to Northern Wisconsin's Nicolet National Forest in 2019, I suspect his dog broke through ice and he went to save it. Unfortunately I surmise, both were lost underwater. rb.gy/xrrg69
Reading the internet piece on Hietpas lead me to discover an amazing number of even more mysterious stories (and a whole culture of investigators) given by police, search and rescue personnel, and Government employees of people disappearing under odd, if not bizarre, circumstance.
In my first readings I dismissed the outlandish claims as just unsolved, and all it takes to resolve the enigma is to read accounts where people were later found. The evidence will then prove that after they are found it's all like a magician's trick, "once you see what happened it's easy to see how you got fooled." But it's not like that. Things get even more inexplicable when the known facts are given.
Check this out: Unsolved: Mysterious death haunting MN mother rb.gy/exl2du
When 24-year-old Jelani Brinson was found drowned in an Anoka MN golf course it seemed like a simple case of a drunken party goer's demise. Oddly, his shoes were found far away with his socks clean and no evidence around the pond how he got there! And he was found face up, men drowning face down (women face up) is well-known to crime investigators. There is a growing list of young men found floating dead after partying that screams "drowned drunks." However evidence often does not indicate drowning, overdose, or hypothermia.
Many of these cases take place in National Forests or Parks. Like when 3-year old Jaryd Atadero went missing Roosevelt National Forest, 60 miles west of Fort Collins, CO, 20 years ago. His remains may seem to indicate a simple case of Puma attack but experts looking at clues which seem totally contradictory to this possibility: rb.gy/eoqfwq and rb.gy/oit1hv has many links.
There are plenty others on YouTube just type in "Missing 411" or "Mysterious missing people."
Reddit attacks the problem and makes good points about one author, yet if professional investigators find it odd there must be something beyond the usual suspects:
Reading the internet piece on Hietpas lead me to discover an amazing number of even more mysterious stories (and a whole culture of investigators) given by police, search and rescue personnel, and Government employees of people disappearing under odd, if not bizarre, circumstance.
In my first readings I dismissed the outlandish claims as just unsolved, and all it takes to resolve the enigma is to read accounts where people were later found. The evidence will then prove that after they are found it's all like a magician's trick, "once you see what happened it's easy to see how you got fooled." But it's not like that. Things get even more inexplicable when the known facts are given.
Check this out: Unsolved: Mysterious death haunting MN mother rb.gy/exl2du
When 24-year-old Jelani Brinson was found drowned in an Anoka MN golf course it seemed like a simple case of a drunken party goer's demise. Oddly, his shoes were found far away with his socks clean and no evidence around the pond how he got there! And he was found face up, men drowning face down (women face up) is well-known to crime investigators. There is a growing list of young men found floating dead after partying that screams "drowned drunks." However evidence often does not indicate drowning, overdose, or hypothermia.
Many of these cases take place in National Forests or Parks. Like when 3-year old Jaryd Atadero went missing Roosevelt National Forest, 60 miles west of Fort Collins, CO, 20 years ago. His remains may seem to indicate a simple case of Puma attack but experts looking at clues which seem totally contradictory to this possibility: rb.gy/eoqfwq and rb.gy/oit1hv has many links.
There are plenty others on YouTube just type in "Missing 411" or "Mysterious missing people."
Reddit attacks the problem and makes good points about one author, yet if professional investigators find it odd there must be something beyond the usual suspects:
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