I happened to listen to a Stuff You Should Know podcast last night – The Unsolved Indiana Dunes Disappearances. I was starting to fall asleep and missed a few parts despite my interest! (I have tried to replay it again today but it won’t for some reason.)
I was not in the Chicago area when this happened (I wasn’t born yet!) I moved to the area in the 80s and I did read about the Jayne family at some point. I had my horse at Jaynesway Stables in Bartlett for several months in the 90s. I met Frank Jr several times (front desk, walking through the barn, etc. He was associated with Richard Bailey.) I recalled the incidents that he was involved in some years earlier. Everyone was very nice to me but I was uneasy. There were workers there that I didn’t want to end up alone in the barn at night with them. I ended up moving my horse to a different barn so I could sleep better at night.
I don’t know what barns were like in the 50s, but these girls had horses and at least 1 was an exercise rider. You know everyone at the barn (farriers, stable hands, etc.) Barns have less than stellar people working at them, even today. They don’t make a lot of money, so who knows what Ann put up with at the barn? Maybe Silas got Ann pregnant? Maybe she threatened him to go public but decided he would help her with an abortion? It is very likely that people at the barn knew they were going to the Dunes for the 4th. It’s a holiday, people talk about what they are doing. I thought I heard them say that a guy that was driving the boat matched the description of the nephew of Silas. Ed Nefeld was a stable worker at his farm and he looked similar. Maybe friend Ed said he would drive his boat out and meet them to go boating (or to take them to the place to have it done.) The podcast said there were 8-9,000 people at the beach that day. There is so much going on, perfect time to pick them up and disappear with them, too much going on to pay attention to people coming and going. Lake Michigan is huge – 118 miles across, 307 miles long. Drive out towards the center of the lake 10-15 miles (you have 50+ miles in either direction now and eventually you will be far, far away from anyone. Unlikely that anyone else would be out that far. He could have drugged or shot them, then threw overboard. Maybe weights, too. Wouldn’t they be fish food? Start a small fire or just make sure the boat takes on water to sink it.
I saw this mentioned elsewhere:
…Nefeld put in an insurance claim two days after the women’s disappearance for a boat fitting the description of the one which picked them up. He allegedly told the insurance company that the boat had burned up in an accidental fire. I haven’t seen any documents backing up this claim, but if it’s proven true, knowing Silas Jayne’s love of dynamite hits, and taking into consideration the boat debris that washed up three miles west of where the women were last seen (“pieces of metal and Styrofoam, believed to have been parts of three boat seats, along with oil and gasoline cans and a piece of oil-soaked wood”) this has got to make any rational person question whether this points to a grisly fate for the young women.
It also mentioned that the name of the boat was scratched off and sandpaper and paint was found on the beach? If I was a cop, I would immediately think these 2 things are related. But they didn’t have the technology back then that we do now. Or, they just ignore it as they are told to do. Many cops were dirty back then. Like that sheriff who died, accidentally, that was going to dig up under one of the houses. Suddenly, there is no interest in doing that after he died.
Also, the podcast said there was a couple/family sitting next to the girls. It was the end of the day and they contacted the ranger as their stuff was all still sitting on the beach. News articles just say that their blanket, clothes, purses and keys were found in their car. How did they get there? Would the couple/ranger have packed up their stuff and found their car and put it in there? Police may not have been that thorough back then or did think he was doing them a favor and put their stuff in the car? .
I think it was Silas.