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There was a newspaper article somewhat recently that said police were investigating a tip that implied Jake was a drug dealer who went to a second party and was murdered there and left under a pier in Georgian Bay. How was his body not found then? It's probably not true.
He was 18. He had a tight knit group of friends that all still hang out together today. At Bush parties, kids drink, act silly with their friends and flirt with people they have crushes on.
Was there another reason he went into the woods... did he have to pee, was he secretly hooking up with a crush, who knows.
That wooded area isn't exactly small, but it's not algonquin as someone mentioned earlier. It has thick brush and rough terrain with boggy areas that have quicksand like mud around it that would take your shoe from you. In the dark, if you're drunk, there's all kinds of trip hazards and ways to get disoriented directionally. I feel like this would have been a recipe for disaster. This was before cellphones so he wouldn't be able to call for help if he got injured. It's the elements that are deadly in that situation. Between the cold temperature drop and the bugs that eat you alive.
But you would think his clothing or backpack would have appeared in all this time.
His Mother said in a newspaper article somewhere that he knew karate. He was 6'2" and 170lbs. He was a big kid who likely could have held his own in a fight, unless there was a weapon involved I guess. One newspaper article said he was chased into the woods, others say he walked in there. Which is it?
I don't know. Does anyone know how well that forest was searched?
The OPP took over policing duties from Midland Police services in February 2018. The tipster from the Simcoe story said they provided the information in May 2018 which was only 3 months after the transition.
I'd be interested to know who exactly they called, the OPP office or some cop from the defunct Midland police. Not all the employees of the Midland police department were offered jobs. Seventy percent of the active employees were looking to continue their employment but only 78% of civilians and 65% of uniformed personnel were offered jobs. Depending on where those deficiencies were, it's possible the tip got lost in the transition. Or there may have been little bit of reactive anger over lost opportunity which resulted in shoddy record keeping.
I used to work for the OPP. For the last 30 years they have systematically taken over a lot of municipal and small town police services. Sometimes they were embraced with open arms and sometimes there was resistance. What a lot of it boils down to is money or lack thereof for police funding. Being absorbed into a mammoth police service has its drawbacks and well as its positives.
Dan Gratrix, Just's high school friend called Crime Stoppers with his tip. Crime Stoppers is a non profit charitable organization that aids law enforcement; they are not the police. So depending on who he talked to at Crime Stoppers they may have been unaware of the transition of Midland OPS to the OPP and the message got lost.
However, the Simcoe news article is now 16 months old which should have given Det. Constable Robin Chiasson ample time to provide some sort of update to the information received.
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