Circumstances of Disappearance
<<On Tuesday, September 5, 1944, Jackie attended his first day of school. His mom sent him with a note saying an older brother would pick him up, but when school let out the teacher allowed Jackie to leave on his own. His home was on the corner of Lake Avenue south and east Railroad Street in Paynesville; that address is now a vacant lot.
When he didn’t come home, his mom called the sheriff. That prompted a massive search with hundreds of volunteers. Boy Scout troops from neighboring towns were called in to help. Sheriff’s department blood hounds and even the civil air patrol took part.
It was a blood hound that found the only clue. It followed Jackie’s scent on a wandering trail leading away from the school down to the river that runs through town. Newspaper records detail how the dog then tracked the scent away from the river, through the west end of Paynesville, and out to a ditch along Old Highway 23.
From there Jackie’s scent vanished. There was strong speculation that little Jackie had been abducted.>>
Feb 4, 2016
Long before Jacob Wetterling – and not that far from where he was taken -- another young central Minnesota boy disappeared without a trace.
www.kare11.com
<<“Couple of people had said they’d seen a little boy standing alongside the road crying,” said Judy Espelund. “Someone else seen him get into a car.”>>
<<When KARE 11 asked the Stearns County Sheriff’s Department to review their old records of the Jackie Theel case, we were told they no longer existed. The Department only has records dating back to 1960.
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension told KARE 11 they were not the investigating agency and have no records of Jackie’s case either. Jackie Theel is also not listed on the BCA’s official missing person’s
clearinghouse website.>>
Sept 22, 2004- Paynesville Press
<<On Tuesday, Sept. 5, 1944, six-year-old Jackie Theel attended his first day of school in Paynesville. His mother later told the Press that he had talked about going to school for weeks and was so excited that he did not eat breakfast.
As far as anyone knows, he did not eat lunch either.
Jackie Theel attended only a half day of school. He left school to walk home for lunch that day and disappeared. "He was in first grade, his first day of school. He was supposed to come home for lunch, but we never saw him," said Fay, his younger brother, who was four-years-old when Jackie disappeared.>>
<<It seems to me that the town of Paynesville was pretty much closed down for three days," said Fay, who now lives on Highway 23 between Roscoe and Richmond.
There was nice weather on the first day of school that year, recalled Annabelle. Then, when they started searching for Jackie the next day, the weather turned cold, rainy, and nasty, she said.>>
Man, I am bawling my eyes out reading this! So sad, that poor family not knowing what happened to him for so long.