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Person of interest says he witnessed things
On the late autumn day of the evening Jacob Wetterling was abducted, a nearby neighbor, Dan Rassier, said he witnessed many peculiar things in the area southeast of St. Joseph.
The day was Sunday, Oct. 22, 1989.
Next day, once Rassier became aware of Jacobs abduction, the things he saw coalesced in his mind as vital connections pointing the way to solving the crime.
Rassier spoke of his frustration in a lengthy July 3 telephone interview with the St. Joseph Newsleader. He is frustrated, he said, because nobody has followed through with the information he so willingly shared about the things he saw that day. Rassier, citing trust issues with the media, declined to divulge the kinds of things he saw, although, when questioned further, he did more or less agree those things were people and/or vehicles. Rassier said he spent a good part of that day jogging on the road past the Delwin Ballroom, where a polka fest was taking place, and on his neighborhood roads, including the one on which Jacob was abducted, just before darkness fell. Jacob was taken on that road (91st Avenue) right at the spot where it intersects with the long driveway to the Robert and Rita Rassier farm.
Rassier said he witnessed things throughout that entire day and into the early evening. When he was not jogging, he spent all of the time at home Oct. 22. At that time - as now - Rassier has lived with his parents.
Another reason Rassier cited for not divulging details about the things he saw is because he does not want to tip off anyone guilty of the abduction.
I am an innocent witness to what happened, he said. But I definitely saw something. All of the investigators know the information I told them.
Rassier has a vivid memory of that autumn day of two decades ago when 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling, his brother and a friend had gone to the Tom Thumb convenience store to get some treats and a video. While returning home on the rural township road, a masked gunman stopped the boys. He told the brother and the friend to run into the woods. When the boys looked back from the woods, Jacob and the man were gone.
From the beginning, Dan Rassier was one of many people questioned by law enforcement.
I was completely cooperative with them, Rassier said. They gave me all kinds of tests, including a lie-detector test. I told them about what Id witnessed.
Now, 20 years later, Rassier is yet again a person of interest by law enforcement. Last week, a variety of law-enforcement agenices, including the F.B.I., converged in force on the Rassier farm, confiscating some unspecified items and digging up earth from a gravel bed and then trucking it from the farm. Authorities have been tight-lipped about the reason for the raid and about confiscated items, saying only that the search of the farm was precipitated by a court order.
Rassier vigorously denies having anything to do with the disappearance of Jacob Wetterling.
Yes, this is very tough, Rassier said. Its a nightmare, but its nothing next to losing a son (Jacob). Ive been getting a lot of death threats. I can handle this, but what worries me is my parents. Its so hard on them. They (media) are saying horrible things about us. They are ruining our lives.
On a bright side, Rassier noted, he and his parents are receiving a lot of cards, letters and calls of support and sympathy from friends, relatives and well-wishers.
Rassier, 54, is a music-band teacher for the Cold Spring/Rocori School District. He is also an avid runner who has participated in countless marathons during the past few decades.
Posted on Thursday, July 8, 2010 by Dennis Dalman