IL IL - Jesse Ross, 20, Chicago, 21 Nov 2006

  • #221
Aug 14, 2020
'On November 21, 2006, 19-year-old Jesse Ross was attending a Model United Nations conference in Chicago. Jesse called his parents to tell them he was having a great time. They would never hear or see their son again.'
 
  • #222
I understand that investigators considered the possibility Jesse may have ended up in Lake Michigan but it was ultimately ruled out because the floodgates were locked.

The curious thing about the river theory is that Jesse should've been captured on surveillance camera if he took the exit that led to the river, whereas the only route from the hotel that wasn't surveilled was one that went away from the river. The fact that Jesse wasn't picked up on camera suggests that he took this exit. Unless he went back on himself, but in that case, how did he evade the security cameras?
Since Chicago is on a grid, it's fairly common to exit on say the north side of a building (in this case that would be away from the river I *believe*) and then very easily walk back southwards. The river is still extremely close, so it's a matter of maybe one city block before you get back to it. It's of course possible that he went somewhere else and it is not what where he ended up, just IMO the location makes it easy to access even if you're 5 blocks away in any direction.
 
  • #223
Since Chicago is on a grid, it's fairly common to exit on say the north side of a building (in this case that would be away from the river I *believe*) and then very easily walk back southwards. The river is still extremely close, so it's a matter of maybe one city block before you get back to it. It's of course possible that he went somewhere else and it is not what where he ended up, just IMO the location makes it easy to access even if you're 5 blocks away in any direction.
Thank you. I can't see past the river theory, tbh. There doesn't appear to be much scope for foul play. Young men with no criminal history aren't usually abducted, and there was no evidence of a struggle. Whether he ended up in the river accidentally or deliberately (be it misadventure or suicide) is another matter.
 
  • #224

jesse_warren_ross_1.jpg
Missing from: Chicago, Illinois
Missing since: November 21, 2006
Date of Birth: February 18, 1987
Age at disappearance: 19
Height: 5’ 10”
Weight: 140
Hair Color: Red
Eye Color: Blue

Distinguishing Characteristics: Scars, Marks, Tattoos: Caucasian male. Pale complexion, freckles, may wear eyeglasses. Nickname: “Opie”

Details of Disappearance: Jesse was in Chicago for a mock United Nations meeting. He disappeared from the Sheraton Towers hotel in the downtown area on November 21, 2006 at about 2:00 a.m. He was attending in Chicago with 13 other University of Missouri-Kansas City students. The day before his return he learned a sponsor had just promised them a trip to Costa Rica. Police say there has been no activity on Jesse’s cell phone or credit cards. He is currently a sophomore at the University of Missouri in Kansas City.


Jan 30, 2021

 
  • #225
November 21, 2006


In November 2006, Jesse Ross, 20, a sophomore in college, traveled to Chicago with a group of thirteen of his fellow University of Missouri-Kansas City college students and their faculty sponsor. The group was in town to attend a model United Nations convention held at the Sheraton Chicago Hotel and Towers. The conference drew more than 1,000 college students from around the country.

On Nov. 20, Jesse called his mother, Donna, to say that he was having a blast at the conference and that he would call her the next day when he and the group were headed back home.

The next night, Nov. 21, the last night of the conference, a dance was held at the hotel. Jesse was spotted on a surveillance photo just before 1 am. He was then seen again at about 2:30 a.m. by friend Ralph Parker. He and Parker were taking part in a simulated emergency U.N. meeting with 30 other students when Jesse left the conference room through a side door. A surveillance camera in the hotel lobby caught the unmistakable image of the red-haired Jesse, clad in a white T-shirt, jeans, and a green warm-up jacket, walking toward the main doors. He was carrying a Gatorade bottle. Parker assumed Jesse had either gone to the restroom or headed back to their hotel to sleep. The hotel was at the Four Points Sheraton at 630 N. Rush St., about ten minutes away, but Jesse never arrived. No one has seen him since.

When the meeting concluded at about 5:30 a.m., Parker walked back to the hotel room alone. He turned on the hall light so he wouldn’t disturb his roommate. “There was a big mess on the bed, and he’s so skinny, I figured he was under the mess somewhere,” Parker says of Jesse. But when he woke up at 10 a.m., he realized Jesse had never returned. No reason to panic, he probably just crashed in someone else’s room, Parker thought. “So I just packed up his stuff thinking he should be thanking me,” he says. It wasn't until about 3 p.m., 12 hours after Jesse had last been seen that Parker and the other UMKC students on the trip realized there was a real emergency.

Jesse Ross is still missing.

About Jesse

Jesse Ross is described as intelligent and funny--a very likable young man not known for ever being depressed or negative. While friends say he had the occasional drink, he never became belligerent or disorderly if drinking. Jesse also has a very bright future mapped out and was on the path to achieving his goals. To anyone who knows him, there is nothing to lead them to believe that Jesse could have walked away from his life or that he would have committed suicide.

Jesse was majoring in communication studies/broadcasting with a minor in political science. He had received a scholarship to attend the University of Missouri Kansas City because of his high ACT score in high school. While at school, he had gotten a promotion from unpaid intern to paid morning on-air personality at Kansas City radio station 95.7 FM - "The Vibe"--- dream job for a sophomore communication studies/broadcasting major. He was now a popular radio personality on the "Shorty and the Boyz" morning show. Coworkers decided he needed an on-air name, so they named him "Opie Cunningham," after Ron Howard's TV characters, Opie Taylor and Richie Cunningham, said Don.

He was also looking forward to finishing up his new room in his parents' home, and he was pledging the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity.

No clues in disappearance

Since Jesse Ross was reported missing, police divers and cadaver dogs have searched along the Chicago River near the Sheraton Chicago Hotel and Towers. Police have also searched the area around both hotels---the Sheraton Chicago Hotel and Towers, where Jesse was last seen, and the Four Points Sheraton, where he was staying. They have not turned up any leads. Chicago police have found no evidence that he was a victim of foul play. There has been no activity on Jesse's credit cards or his cell phone, neither of which have been found. GPS tracking could not be used on Jesse's cell phone because it is either turned off or the battery is dead.

On a Web site dedicated to her son, Donna Ross has expressed her frustration. "When you lose someone you love when they pass on, you grieve and then you move on with your life," Donna said. "We are nowhere. We are still stuck in that revolving door. We know nothing more than we knew that first day."
 
  • #226
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  • #227
  • #228
Had also been thinking of Jesse when reading about Riley's case. imo.
From link, ty..

'''When Jesse left for Chicago, he packed some music mixes in hopes of networking. His parents believe he may have encountered the wrong person trying to share his love for music''.

“I think the main thing to us that stands out is he ended up separated from a group and on his own,” Don said. “When we heard the story that’s kind of the parallels that we thought. It makes us cringe.”
 
  • #229
The fact I find rather strange, is that Jesse was mugged previously (I believe his camera was stolen when he was in chicago the year before). One has to wonder why he chose to take $400 on this last trip when he had previously experience it was dangerous. What reason would one have to carry that much money on a school trip? Seems odd to me
 
  • #230
The fact I find rather strange, is that Jesse was mugged previously (I believe his camera was stolen when he was in chicago the year before). One has to wonder why he chose to take $400 on this last trip when he had previously experience it was dangerous. What reason would one have to carry that much money on a school trip? Seems odd to me
Having $400 in his wallet doesn’t seem strange to me, maybe perhaps if we throw in that he was mugged the year before, I don’t know. My two kids, who are in college, have several hundred dollars in their wallets because when they get cash gifts, into the wallet it goes. If I were to ask them how much they have, they wouldn’t know without looking. Anywhere they go, they take their wallets, not considering all the cash it contains at all.

On the flip side, $400 back then is a lot, but cash was king, and he was traveling. Makes sense to me to make sure you have more than enough cash and then a bit more for good measure.
 
  • #231
Can anyone make out what he appears to have in his hand in the surveillance footage?
 
  • #232

5109DMIL - Jesse Warren Ross​

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Jesse on Sheraton security video; Right: Age-Progression by NCMEC to age 22 years; 30 years

Name: Jesse Warren Ross
Case Classification: Endangered Missing
Missing Since: November 21, 2006
Location Last Seen: Chicago, Cook County, Illinois

Physical Description​

Date of Birth: February 18, 1987
Age: 19 years old
Race: White
Gender: Male
Height: 5'10"
Weight: 140 lbs.
Hair Color: Auburn, short
Eye Color: Blue
Nickname/Alias: Opie
Distinguishing Marks/Features: Wears glasses; freckles

Identifiers​

Dentals: Available
Fingerprints: Available
DNA: Available

Clothing & Personal Items​

Clothing: White T-shirt, green warm-up jacket (hoodie), blue jeans, black athletic sneakers
Jewelry: Unknown
Additional Personal Items: Glasses, cellphone, wallet

Circumstances of Disappearance​

Jesse, a sophomore at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, was attending a model United Nations Conference in Chicago with 13 other UMKC students and their faculty sponsor. The 3-day conference, which drew more than 1,000 college students from across the country, was held at the Sheraton Office Towers at 301 E. North Water Street.

The last night was supposed to end with a dance but at 2 a.m. Jesse and other student members of the Model U.N. Security Council were called to a late-night crisis simulation. At about 2:30 a.m., they decided to take a break. Jesse got up from his chair and walked out of the room. A surveillance camera in the hotel lobby caught Jesse's image (see photo). This is the last known sighting of Jesse. He reportedly stepped out a back door, which allegedly led to a "shortcut" that students said they had been using.

The 10-minute walk back to Four Points Sheraton Hotel, at 630 N. Rush Street, where Jesse and the UMKC group was staying, was well-lit, heavily traveled, and covered by outdoor security cameras. None of them recorded Jesse and there is no evidence he returned to his room.

The next morning, as the participants were getting ready to head home, Jesse was nowhere to be found.

In 2005, Jesse had traveled to Chicago for a previous Model U.N. trip. At that time, he was mugged while shooting night photos downtown, and his digital camera was stolen. A police report was not filed, and Jesse's parents cautioned him to be careful on this trip.

There has been no activity on Jesse's credit cards or his cell phone since he disappeared.
 
  • #233
Just went through this whole thread and I'm curious about one thing:

Some have theorized that Jesse just got drunk and fell in the river. But did he appear drunk during the Mock U.N. emergency meeting?

The meeting was convoked around 2 a.m. to simulate a real life crisis situation. Prior to that, there had been a dance around 1 a.m. where the students could've been drinking, partying, etc., since they had no way of knowing an emergency meeting would be called. But, at least in this thread, I haven't read a report of Jesse (or any other student) appearing drunk.

They called for a half-hour a break at 2:30 a.m. (which I find a little odd since the meeting had just started), and after they came back together around 3 a.m., the meeting went on for another two and a half hours, which I think would've been tough if other students had been drunk.

Because of this, it doesn't seem to me that alcohol was involved in Jesse's disappearance.
 
  • #234
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  • #235

Derrick Levasseur just covered this case on his YouTube show Detective Perspective.

Three quick points from his coverage that I wasn't aware of:

1. He made it sound like the students already knew that an "emergency meeting" would be called later that night. Not sure if this is important. Up to now, I thought that the "emergency meeting" was a surprise, intended to simulate what can really happen in the UN. So since the students had no idea, they drank and partied more than usual, thinking their "work day" was over, so to speak. If Jesse knew about the meeting and still chose to drink more than normal, could that say anything about his state of mind?

2. Jesse could've exited the conference hotel through an area that was on camera but was very poorly lit. Derrick shows it on the episode, and I think he gets it from the documentary When I Last Saw Jesse. In short, he sadly could be in the footage, just invisible to the naked eye.

3. The episode also makes clear that some students reported Jesse was visibly very drunk, to the point that one student asked Jesse if he was okay or needed help because he was losing his balance.
 
  • #236
Just throwing this out there..
What are the chances Jesse got a ride from someone to go someplace (a gig?) and that vehicle disappeared into the Chicago River?
Perhaps unlikely, but strangers things have happened, inspired by this news.. fwiw, speculation, imo.
September 2025
1757183115967.webp

'An independent dive team trying to solve a missing persons cold case from 1970 has uncovered 97 vehicles in the Chicago River.'

''Some of the cars are clumped together, though the team is more focused on finding individual cars that they say are more likely to be linked to an accident or other incident.

“A lot of these are in piles, we have three piles that are ranging anywhere from 12 to 19 cars in one spot … We are a little bit more interested in those cars that’s kind of the one-off, or just one vehicle by itself because that’s going to be more indicative of an accident, or even self-harm or foul play,” Ms. Bussick told Chicago’s WFLD-TV.''
 

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