MN MN - Susan Swedell, 19, Lake Elmo, 19 Jan 1988

  • #201

Swedell would be 57 years old on Thursday, according to the Washington County Sheriff’s Office; instead, she remains the subject of a mystery still unsolved decades after she went missing.
 
  • #202
 
  • #203
Alot off odd things about this case. If Susan was leaving work and heading home to watch a movie, why change into a skirt..esp during a snowstorm? Getting into this other vehicle, why leave your purse and eyeglasses behind if you intended to leave the vehicle behind?
The Mother thinks Susan returned home days later because dishes were in the sink and it smelled like cigarettes...did LE test for fingerprints?
 
  • #204
Hi Sweetluv. There are truly many odd pieces to this story.

Alot off odd things about this case. If Susan was leaving work and heading home to watch a movie, why change into a skirt..esp during a snowstorm?

One theory I think early investigators considered was that she was planning to meet somebody, but her sister has posted about this in social media and commented in the Still Missing Podcast. She says that Sue had a habit of changing into different outfits sometimes several times a day. Her sister never read much into that information. The skirt and sweater she changed into were seasonally appropriate according to her sister and it was the outfit she had worn earlier in the day to her first job at a boutique called Body & Sole. The clothes she changed out of were a pair of red pants and a red long sleeve button up shirt.

If she was going home to watch a movie with her mom and sister while the snowstorm passed, was she changing into a more comfortable outfit to lounge around in? Why not just wait and do that at home?


Getting into this other vehicle, why leave your purse and eyeglasses behind if you intended to leave the vehicle behind?

I suggested a few posts back that maybe she didn't leave these items in her car, but somebody came back to her car later that night and planted the items. It would be consistent behavior with all the other apparent manipulation. Examples: A. the sabotage of the car's cooling system - somebody had to unscrew that radiator drain plug. B. the sudden appearance of the red pants and shirt under Sue's bed (!) on the same day somebody entered the family's home while they were away. C. That same strange visitor also left the hidden key on the porch in an unusual place, left dishes in the sink that shouldn't have been there, and a burning odor hanging in the air.

The Mother thinks Susan returned home days later because dishes were in the sink and it smelled like cigarettes...did LE test for fingerprints?

Susan's sister has stated on the Swedell Strong Facebook page, "Our house was not dusted for fingerprints."
 
  • #205
@Reminder ..thanks for answering my questions!
 
  • #206
  • #207

Thanks for posting this, @mlhenn. I didn't know about that site. It looks like Susan Swedell's sister has teamed up with one of the PIs at SolveTheCase and created a new page about the case. There's a discussion started there by said PI. And Susan's sister has posted about it on her Swedell Strong Facebook page.
 
  • #208
Susan has been missing for over 37 years.
 
  • #209
In the third paragraph from the bottom it says a few days after the disappearance there was an odor of cigarette smoke in the residence and dirty dishes in the sink. The red pantsuit Swedell had been wearing on the day of her disappearance....

How unusual. Most abductors do not allow the victim to return home.
Someone had her keys
 
  • #210
So i am not too knowledgeable when it comes to automotive parts. How hard is it to locate the petcock part on a car?
Would that be a general choice for someone wanting to disable someone's car?
 
  • #211
So i am not too knowledgeable when it comes to automotive parts. How hard is it to locate the petcock part on a car?
Would that be a general choice for someone wanting to disable someone's car?

It's easy. And it was virtually common knowledge in the 1970s and 1980s, especially for young males. For decades generations of young men were raised to assist their fathers in the garage taking care of routine car maintenance. The winterization of a cars cooling system was a very common thing people did in their garages by themselves. It was routine. So were oil changes. So was periodically draining the cooling system just to change out the coolant/antifreeze.

It was a well known way that you could sabotage somebody's car because you didn't even need to pop the hood open to do it. The petcock was within arms reach if you crawled under the front bumper of a 1975 Cutlass Supreme. Easy peasy.

I'll put this into further perspective. I remember a conversation some older kids were having when I was about 14 or 15 (1980s). These guys grew up taking antique cars apart and fixing them with their dads. They had way more than common knowledge about automobiles. I distinctly remember the impression they made on me when they were talking one day about easy ways that cars could be sabotaged. This was mostly in the spirit of something that might happen to your own car, but also the mischevous awareness that you could really stick it to an enemy. One of the things they talked about was reaching up under the front bumper and turning the petcock out on the radiator so the car would overheat and stop running or even possibly damage the engine.

I spent some time looking into this in digital newspaper archives. There were a few examples of cars being vandalized by somebody draining the radiators going back into the 1940s. Far and few in between but it did get occasional mention in newspapers. There was one I posted above somewhere about a woman who was assaulted by a man in Florida in the 1970s who had apparently sabotaged her car's cooling system by draining the fluid and then followed her and pretended to help her along a busy Miami highway. There is nothing original under the sun.
 
  • #212
I have read conflicting information on the car keys. Were they found in the car with Susan's purse and glasses...or never found?
 
  • #213
I have read conflicting information on the car keys. Were they found in the car with Susan's purse and glasses...or never found?

According to her sister, the keys were never found. The car was locked. Missing were Sue, the clothing she had changed out of as she left her shift at Kmart, and the car keys. Her purse (containing cash and driver's license) and her glasses were found on the front seat to the right of the driver's seat.
 
  • #214
The year after Susan went missing, another teen girl disappeared about 30 miles away and both girls had a parent that worked for the University of Minnesota. Could there be a connection?

 
  • #215
Theory: The Mechanical and Environmental Inconsistencies in the Narrative

After reviewing the official reports, historical weather data, and the physical evidence regarding the disappearance of Susan Swedell, I have identified several critical inconsistencies that challenge the prevailing theory of a random mechanical breakdown. My analysis is based on verified case facts, though the conclusions drawn below represent my own theory (IMO) regarding the sequence of events.

The Probability of the Location

The prevailing theory that the car was sabotaged at Susan’s workplace relies on the assumption that a perpetrator could predict exactly when and where the vehicle would fail. Mechanical sabotage is inherently unpredictable. A loosened petcock could have resulted in a breakdown miles away on a dark highway shoulder or in a busy intersection, neither of which grants the perpetrator control over the environment.

My theory is that the location was the variable being controlled, not the mechanical failure. The fact that Susan arrived safely at a lit, populated gas station suggests she chose to stop there. IMO, the mechanical issue was likely fabricated or inflicted on-site to justify her presence at the location. This aligns with statements from Washington County Criminal Intelligence Analyst Blake Trantham, who noted that the radiator plug had been loosened in a way that would be "difficult to do just accidentally" (KARE 11 Staff, 2025).

The Pre-Existing Connection to "Dale"

We must contextualize the stop at the station with Susan’s behavior in the days leading up to her disappearance. Official reports confirm that Susan had been frequenting telephone "party lines" in the weeks prior (The Disappearance of Susan Anne Swedell, n.d.). Furthermore, Susan had received phone calls at her workplace from a man identified as "Dale," and explicitly confided in a friend that she was "planning to meet a new guy" that night (KARE 11 Staff, 2025).

IMO, the most damning evidence of a planned meeting is the discrepancy in her statements. While she told her mother she was coming straight home to watch movies (KSTP Staff, 2025), she admitted the meeting to her peer. This fits the profile of a "Surprise" scenario—she likely intended to bring him home to introduce him to her family, explaining why she maintained the "coming home" timeline to her mother while acknowledging the meeting to her friend. This pre-existing connection confirms that "Dale" was not a stranger she met by chance at the gas station, but a planned rendezvous.

Behavioral Evidence: Intent to Return

The state of Susan’s personal effects and attire further contradicts the narrative that she voluntarily left the scene for a ride home. Susan had changed into a skirt before leaving work, attire that was notably impractical for a blizzard but consistent with dressing for a planned social encounter (The Charley Project, n.d.).

Crucially, Susan left her purse and prescription glasses inside her vehicle. IMO, leaving the glasses is a significant behavioral indicator. As a nearsighted individual, Susan may have removed them to improve her appearance for a first meeting—a common behavior for someone wanting to make a good impression. However, the decision to leave them (and her purse) behind suggests she did not intend to be gone long. If she were leaving for a ride home, she would need her glasses to see and her purse for essentials. Leaving them implies she expected to return to her car.

The Mechanical Evidence of the Driver's Seat

This theory is further supported by the physical evidence of the driver’s seat. Official case files state the seat was found pushed back to a position inconsistent with Susan’s height (The Charley Project, n.d.).

The logical conclusion drawn from this evidence is that Susan was not the last person to drive the vehicle. IMO, the adjusted seat indicates a larger individual entered the vehicle and drove it to its final parking spot. If Susan had parked the car herself, the seat would have remained in the position adjusted for her height. The necessity to move the seat suggests a taller driver took control of the vehicle at the station to move it away from the pumps.

The Logical Inconsistency of the Plow Warning

According to detectives reviewing the case file, the attendant stated she told Susan to move her car from the pumps because "they're going to plow here" (Divine, 2018).

My theory is that this instruction is logically inconsistent with the behavior of a helpful witness assisting a stranded motorist. If the plow was not due until the following morning, there was no immediate operational need to force a customer with a supposedly overheating engine to restart and move her vehicle during a blizzard. IMO, this statement sounds like a reason that could be used to describe why the vehicle was found in a different location than where she initially pulled in. Furthermore, prioritizing a future plowing schedule over the immediate safety of a customer reflects a concern for site maintenance that is uncharacteristic of a standard shift attendant, sounding more like a directive from management or ownership.

Environmental Evidence and the Sport Wheels

We must also look at the environmental facts of that night. Historical weather data for Lake Elmo, MN on January 19, 1988, records Heavy Snow (+SN), Fog (FG), and Blowing Snow (BLSN) with over half an inch of liquid precipitation falling (Weather Underground, 1988).

Despite these conditions, the gas station attendant provided a specific description of the suspect’s vehicle, noting it was a "light-colored older model car with sport wheels" (Divine, 2018). IMO, identifying specific "sport wheels" on a slush-covered car through a window, through fog and heavy snow, from 30-50 feet away is visually improbable. The probability of accurately identifying rim style on a vehicle covered in road salt and snow, under canopy lighting at night, is extremely low.

The Suspect Description Shift

Finally, we must scrutinize the suspect profile. For nearly 37 years, official bulletins listed the suspect's hair color as "Brown" or unspecified, and composite sketches implied a suspect with dark hair (NamUs, n.d.). However, in January 2025, the Washington County Sheriff's Office released a new description explicitly looking for a man with "shoulder-length sandy blonde hair" (KARE 11 Staff, 2025).

IMO, this massive shift in the description after four decades raises serious questions about the reliability of the original witness accounts. If the attendant originally said "blonde," why was the public looking for a dark-haired man for 37 years?

Conclusion

My theory stands that Susan was lured to that location, not stranded there. The pre-existing contact with "Dale," her choice of clothing, and the fact that she left her glasses behind all point to a planned meeting with the expectation of returning to her car. The mechanical alibi and the physical evidence of the seat position confirm that the scene was managed by a second party. If anyone has the podcats episodes from 2018, please guide me to them, as I have been unsuccessful in finding any official statements from the gas station attendant despite being informed (by Reminder)and finding evidence (on PodBay.com) that such interviews did exist at one point, but are not accessible at this time.


References

Divine, M. (2018, January 19). 30 years later, police still hope to find missing Lake Elmo woman. The St. Paul Pioneer Press. https://www.twincities.com/2018/01/...e-still-hope-to-find-missing-lake-elmo-woman/

Harlow, T. (2018, January 22). Aggressive search launched for Lake Elmo woman missing for 30 years. Star Tribune. https://www.startribune.com/aggress...ke-elmo-woman-missing-for-30-years/470143803/

KARE 11 Staff. (2025, January 21). Investigators asking inmates for help in 1988 Susan Swedell missing person case[Video]. KARE 11 News. https://www.kare11.com/article/news...t-description-change-susan-swedell-cold-case/

KSTP Staff. (2025, February 13). Washington County asks for any leads on birthday of woman missing since 1988. KSTP 5 Eyewitness News. Washington County asks for any leads on birthday of woman missing since 1988

NamUs. (n.d.). Missing Person / NamUs #MP335. National Missing and Unidentified Persons System. Retrieved December 29, 2025, from Missing Person / NamUs #MP335

The Disappearance of Susan Anne Swedell. (n.d.). r/UnresolvedMysteries [Forum Post]. Reddit. Retrieved December 29, 2025.

The Charley Project. (n.d.). Susan Anne Swedell. Retrieved December 29, 2025, from Susan Anne Swedell – The Charley Project

Weather Underground. (1988). Historical Weather for KMSP: January 19, 1988. Retrieved December 29, 2025, from Minneapolis, MN Weather History | Weather Underground
 

Guardians Monthly Goal

Staff online

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
128
Guests online
1,370
Total visitors
1,498

Forum statistics

Threads
636,558
Messages
18,699,456
Members
243,756
Latest member
amans2006
Back
Top