ST. JOSEPH, MINN. — Jerry Wetterling began his Tuesday morning walk in darkness, a ball cap and gloves shielding him from the wind. Along the rural road, past the ditch that remains etched in Minnesota’s memory, to the park. By the time he reached the rock — Jacob’s rock — sunlight streamed through the old oak trees.
He settled into the rock’s curves and closed his eyes.
Wetterling, 66, makes this trek twice a week, taking a quiet moment to “put out some extra Jacob vibes,” he said. Especially in October, he said. Especially this year — the 25th since his son, Jacob Wetterling, was abducted at age 11.
From the rock, bookended by trees planted in Jacob’s honor, power lines lead to the road where, on Oct. 22, 1989, Jacob, his younger brother Trevor and best friend Aaron Larson rode their bikes to the Tom Thumb store to rent a video. As they headed home, a masked man with a gun appeared. He told the boys to lie face down in the roadside ditch. One by one, he asked their ages. One by one, he ordered them to run to the woods and not look back.
Except Jacob. Jacob he kept.
In the 25 years since that Sunday night, Jerry and Patty Wetterling have tirelessly fought to protect children from a similar fate. Patty helped change the landscape of missing children, from sex offender registries to police training. The share of missing children recovered has grown from 62 percent in 1990 to 97 percent today, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which counts Patty as its board chair.
Their fight for others still includes their hope for Jacob. They’ve done hundreds of interviews to drum up information. They’ve searched for answers alongside investigators who have vetted some 50,000 leads — tips, connections and even false confessions.
In the quiet moments, they admit to exhaustion. Frustration. And a fear they resist — that they will never know what happened.