ST. CLOUD – Investigative mistakes and misplaced effort in the days, weeks and months following the 1989 abduction of Jacob Wetterling prevented authorities from making Danny James Heinrich the prime suspect in a case that haunted Minnesotans for nearly 30 years.
Based on what investigators learned about Heinrich soon after Wetterling's disappearance — such as tire tracks, a shoe print and a tip that clearly linked the former Paynesville loner to the case — Heinrich should have been the primary suspect within 48 hours of the kidnapping, Stearns County Sheriff Don Gudmundson said Thursday.
For inexplicable reasons, he said, a task force assembled to find Wetterling and the masked man who abducted him wasted more time chasing far-flung leads and conferring with psychics than tracking compelling evidence close to home.
"It went off the rails," Gudmundson said of the investigation in the weeks following the 11-year-old's kidnapping at gunpoint in St. Joseph, Minn., in October 1989. "It went off the rails very quickly."
It would take 27 years for investigators to circle back to Heinrich and find a way to compel him to admit to killing Jacob and then lead them to the boy's remains in a pasture in Paynesville.
Gudmundson, who was not involved in the original investigation and became Stearns County sheriff in May 2017, held a news conference at the Stearns County Law Enforcement Center on Thursday detailing his analysis of the investigation before releasing thousands of pages of case documents. His presentation, expected to highlight exhaustive work by dozens of investigators over nearly three decades, instead was a pointed criticism of investigative "tunnel vision."
The Wetterling file, he said, reveals myriad missed opportunities to catch Jacob's killer in the months after the boy was snatched on a remote dirt road while returning home from a convenience store with his brother, Trevor, and best friend, Aaron Larson. The law enforcement failures stretched back years — even before Wetterling was abducted — with some eight victims in the area having been attacked in a similar manner by a stocky, raspy-voiced man.
"There were around 20 things" that pointed to Heinrich that investigators should have pieced together, the sheriff said when questioned by reporters after his 135-page slide presentation. He said he was at a loss to explain why those clues were missed or dismissed.