“Compounding horrors and astonishing revelations”

Yesterday, CNN published an incredibly detailed and harrowing article by Thomas Lake, “An Iowa paperboy disappeared 41 years ago. His [80-year-old] mother is still on the case.”

https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2023/12/us/johnny-gosch-missing-iowa-boy-cec-cnnphotos/

I have studied and followed this tragic case, as well as the Franklin scandal, for a long time. Johnny Gosch, age 12, vanished on an early morning in September 1982 while on his newspaper route in West Des Moines, Iowa. It is another one of those horrifying investigations where “countless hours of police work had led nowhere near the truth.” His mother is Noreen Gosch. She has been through a “special” kind of hell. The kind where you lose your child to a monster or monsters, have no answers, and get fucked over by most of the police and some in the “true crime” and “just get on with your life” communities. 

The reasons for Johnny’s disappearance would be fiercely debated. Theories would proliferate. Some would call it an impenetrable mystery, insisting that countless hours of police work had led nowhere near the truth.

Johnny’s mother would open a parallel investigation, one that continues to this day. In August 2023, not long before her 80th birthday, she pointed to her own skull and said, “I’ve got pretty much all of it in the file cabinet up here.”

By then she had named the names of more than half a dozen alleged perpetrators or potential suspects, none of whom had been arrested in her son’s case. She’d been ignored and dismissed, threatened and ridiculed, but Noreen Gosch kept searching for answers. The loss of Johnny changed the way she saw America. She said it convinced her of the corruption in our institutions, the injustice in our justice system, the breathtaking power behind the men who took her son. A force none other than evil itself.

The Gosch case is a vast labyrinth, full of wonder and terror, a place so dark you can barely see your hand in front of your face. I spent several months there while reporting this story, trying to reconcile Noreen’s findings with those of the authorities, hoping to gather all the objective facts. Many of those facts remain undiscovered.

And so, a warning: Any conclusion you make about the fate of Johnny Gosch will require some combination of guesswork and faith. Most people who study the case eventually settle on one of the following two theories.

You can choose to believe that Johnny was murdered soon after his disappearance, even though no killer has been identified and no remains have been found.

Or you can believe Noreen Gosch, who says she saw Johnny years later, very much alive, and talked to him just long enough to know why he had to disappear again.

CNN, Lake, 12-15-23

Hopefully, you are a reader not a skimmer and hopefully you have not lost the ability to read and consider more than a blurb on social media. Read Lake’s article and consider the corrupt police chief in this case, Orval Cooney. That should make your blood run cold. This man is comparable, but perhaps much worse than the fuck up police chief involved in the Gilgo Beach serial killer investigation, Suffolk Co. New York PD chief James Burke. (Google The Botched Hunt for the Gilgo Beach Killer, New York Times, Oct. 19, 2023. Corrupt district attorney added to the mix.). In early 2003 Noreen Gosch and attorney John DeCamp were preparing a lawsuit against Cooney for his misconduct in the Gosch investigation, when the POS had the good sense to take himself out with a sudden heart attack at age 69. There is more about Cooney in this YouTube interview with Noreen Gosch, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrYAb5DFEyE .

Over the decades, many have opined in the OCCK case that a police officer was involved. Two names, Robert Van Hengel (ATF agent and suspect in the murder of Gail Webster in 1978), and Richard Clayton (Detroit PD, buddies with Arch Sloan), immediately come to mind. There are no doubt others who are “candidates,” but the OCCK investigation would never touch any of these suspects in any kind of depth. 

Lake asked police to comment for this article.

(The West Des Moines Police Department declined to release its full investigative case file, because the Gosch case is still an active investigation involving state and federal authorities, and declined to make any current investigators available for an interview. It also declined to answer my extensive list of questions about the case. But the agency did send me a statement, which read, in part, “We understand how deeply this case has affected the family, the community, law enforcement officials and the nation. This case will remain open, and we won’t stop investigating until we have closure and answers as to what happened to Johnny Gosch.”)

Sound familiar?

The frightening and likely correct theory Noreen Gosch developed in her search for the truth and to make it safe for her son to come forward is this:

Her son was kidnapped. The kidnappers were part of a sex-trafficking ring. She believed it had ties to a sexual-blackmail operation, in which her son said he’d been forced to participate, and it was all so big, so powerful, so pervasive, that the authorities would never solve it, would never arrest anyone, because, as Noreen had come to believe, this is America, where some people are sacrificed because others are above the law.

CNN article

Some people are sacrificed because others are above the law. Such sacrifices include Mark Stebbins, Jill Robinson, Kristine Mihelich and Tim King. People like L. Brooks Patterson and Richard Thompson knew this equation decades ago. Collateral damage must be expected, but not attach to them. ”We [think we] know how hard this has been for the families . . .,” BUT . . . . That it is so difficult to even read an entire article like Lake’s is part of the reason this sacrifice continues. 

Friday, December 15, 2023

The Detroit News has a good article today on unsolved murders in Detroit. The article is for subscribers only, here’s a link: https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/detroit-city/2023/12/14/detroit-unsolved-murders-families-want-answers-other-cases-gain-notice/71741032007/?utm_source=pdtn-DailyBriefing&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailybriefing&utm_term=hero&utm_content=1008DN-E-NLETTER65 . I want to post more about this over the weekend, but for now here is a summary from a reader which is helpful in evaluating parallels to the investigations in the child killer case:

I suppose it is because of how most Police agencies handle all murder cases, but I always felt it is just human nature of some people.  Do everything you can to keep all work (and accountability) off my desk. From the article:

·        “I feel like I was victimized twice because it seems like everyone has forgot about my son,”

·        Former Detroit Police Assistant Chief Steve Dolunt said it’s often difficult to explain to families why there’s no news to report about their loved ones’ cases   You never officially drop in the cases where there’s no evidence, you keep it on your desk hoping to go back to it, but then you get new cases coming in where there is evidence, so you put the old one aside temporarily and try to get a killer off the street,” Dolunt said. “Then, the family will call on the first case, and you reopen it, but there’s nothing but dead-end leads.”

·        Dolunt agreed that cases can sometimes get lost in the shuffle as detectives move in and out of Homicide, and their caseloads get passed onto other investigators.

·        “If a case isn’t ruled a homicide, then it’s not something (homicide detectives) can work on,” he said. “You’ll get a case that was ruled a suicide, and the family will insist you reopen the case because they say the victim would never commit suicide. Unfortunately, you just can’t help them.

Reader’s overview and quotes from article.

I want to think about it in the context of the sentencing hearing of Ethan Crumbley in Oakland County and what was afforded to victims in that case. Speaking of the Crumbleys, today in Virginia the mother of a six-year-old who brought a gun to school and shot his teacher was sentenced to two years in prison. ”Deja Taylor ‘abdicated most, if not all’ of her responsibilities as a parent when her 6-year-old son got hold of her gun and used it to shoot a teacher at Richneck Elementary School in January, a judge told her Friday.” https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2023/12/15/richneck-shooting-teacher-newport-news/. 

In other news, Michigan State University Board of Trustees took a long-awaited step today by unanimously approving the release of thousands of withheld university documents linked to the sexual abuse scandal involving sexual predator Larry Nassar.

The documents, which MSU previously wouldn’t release based on attorney-client privilege, will be prepared and released to Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel. It is not clear if or when they might become public. https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/michigan/2023/12/15/msu-board-vote-documents-larry-nassar-scandal/71924517007/ . Maybe there will be answers about how “Dr.” Nassar was able to hurt so many girls and women for so long and remain undetected and/or protected. Somebody had to stay on MSU like a fly on shit for five years to get them to agree to release those documents. Maybe a victory for transparency. It remains to be seen. 

And here is an article about charges brought in October in Charlevoix against a California man and a Michigan man for sexually assaulting a child. Charges were being reviewed against a third man who may have been involved.

https://upnorthlive.com/news/local/2-men-charged-with-sexually-assaulting-charlevoix-county-child

Editing to add this “blast from the past”–a reader found this article from The Saginaw News dated December 28, 1975. Seems that when Christopher Busch wasn’t grooming or raping boys, he had time to make the Dean’s List at Northwood Institute:

No comment on the headline “Submachine gun used to kill runaway cow.” 

Living Word Church minister James Randolph arrested for sexual assault

Mark Barclay Ministries pastor James Randolph arrested for sexual assault, accosting children for immoral purposes
— Read on www.ourmidland.com/news/police_and_courts/article/midland-pastor-james-randolph-arrested-seven-18521928.php