July 25, 2025 article
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“His history showed that he lived there in Mason City, Iowa. So I Google searched once again, Google search women abducted and missing from there. She pops up, slight resemblance to Rene, the blond hair and everything.” Sheriff Degase said. “So I contacted the authorities there and gave them the information. I said, ‘Hey, I really don’t have anything other than this. You know, I believe the guy is a serial killer. He’s killed one in my county, he killed one in Wisconsin Rapids, and now we’re seeing that he has some connection to Mason City, Iowa.'”
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The Find Jodi facebook page has a recent update to the 30 Facts about her case, correcting some information like where the partial palm print was found. It wasn't found on her car, but instead on a light pole. Also, no beer cans were found in her apartment. They were found in an apartment complex dumpster. It sounds like maybe those things possibly don't even have anything to do with her case, especially the beer cans? I assume the light pole that had the partial palm print was right by her car.
By the time police arrived at the Key Apartments complex around quarter past seven that morning, it was clearly a crime scene. The attacker was believed to have accosted Jodi as she attempted to insert the key into the door of her car. The police found her car key and it was bent, indicating that some heavy pressure, either from Jodi’s hand or the hand of her attacker, had been applied while it was in the locking mechanism.
After processing the car that day, police noted that the heavy morning moisture had been rubbed off the door and that an outline of her head was on the car’s black fabric roof. Presumably, Jodi’s attacker had pushed her back against the car. It appeared as if her attacker grabbed Jodi from behind and twisted her around, pushing her small frame back against the driver’s door and forcing her head back onto the convertible’s ragtop.
The forensic team also found a partial bloody palm print on the car, and witnesses reported seeing blood or tissue evidence on the driver’s side rearview mirror, which indicated Jodi may have been injured and that she may have fought for her life. In an effort to fend off the attacker, Jodi may have flung out her arms or struck back with some kind of satchel, purse, or briefcase, dropping some of her belongings, including a hair dryer, a can of hair spray, and earrings; police found these, as well as a pair of her red high-heeled shoes, scattered over a significantly wide area of the parking lot.
The palm print being on the lamp post instead of her car, as previously reported, was discussed in the recent three-part documentary on Hulu and Disney +. Here’s the trailer:This is news to me. I don’t use Facebook so I’m not familiar with this page, but the fact that a hand/palm print being left on her car has been a long known fact, and I’ve never heard of it being false. In Beth Bednar’s book about the case, Dead Air, she shares a detailed list of some of the major known facts of the case, including:
Is there any source outside of Facebook to verify that the palm print on the car is inaccurate?
ABC News Studios says in a press release the series also promises "never-before-seen material and new, groundbreaking information" about the case.
The palm print being on the lamp post instead of her car, as previously reported, was discussed in the recent three-part documentary on Hulu and Disney +. Here’s the trailer:
As stated in this People article about the new docuseries (which dropped this summer, on July 15):
This is the post the Facebook page referred to: 30 Seconds, 30 Years, 30 Facts: The Unsolved Disappearance of Jodi Huisentruit • Find Jodi Huisentruit
#13 – Very little forensic evidence was found at the crime scene. A partial palm print was obtained from a light pole near Jodi’s car and a strand of hair was also discovered, according to retired MCPD investigator Frank Stearns, in a television interview. Stearns refused to say if a root was attached to the hair. It’s not publicly known if the evidence found was related to Jodi’s disappearance. A witness also approached police stating that he’d seen a white van near Jodi’s car around the time she disappeared.
Yes, the link you provided goes to a post on the FindJodi webpage, which, IMO, is the best and most up-to-date source of information about Jodi’s disappearance.
#13 of the post:
is addressed in the recent Hulu docuseries whose trailer I shared in my previous post.
Note that the author Beth Bednar is a (former?) team member of FindJodi.com. She wrote her excellent book about Jodi’s disappearance, Dead Air, in 2011, and the recent docuseries updates the case facts known at that time.
IMO
IIRC, the docuseries claims the palm print location was misreported originally, based on a leak? (Sorry, but I watched the series back in July.)I guess that is the basis for my confusion: is that something that they held back until recently? Or merely new information? I lean toward the former knowing that Beth Bednar is, or was at one point, involved. Does this negate the existence of the palm prints or related evidence on her car? Or is it an addition?
Well, the docuseries was made by ABC News, so doesn’t it count as a news source?Is there a source outside of the documentary or an article about the documentary? I’m aware of it, but haven’t had the chance to watch it yet.
Well, the docuseries was made by ABC News, so doesn’t it count as a news source?
But, it has now been proven that all that "spending the evening with John, drinking, and watching video, and leaving around 11pm (per John) was a lie on John's part.I also have little memory of beer cans being relevant in any way.
It was known that Jodi spent the late evening before with Vansice before heading home, and I’m pretty sure they might have drank together while watching tapes, along with possibly drinking earlier in the day. Why would she then be drinking beer in cans with a stranger, when she had to get up in mere hours to anchor the news? Jodi was late at times, but never absent or negligent in her work.
I always thought LE and others assumed she had a male visitor because her toilet seat was up— but realistically, there could be a number of reasons for that which had nothing to do with her murder. For all we know, Jodi felt a little sick in the morning, put the seat up thinking she would throw up, either did or didn’t, and merely forget to put the seat down while in a rush to get to work on time.
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