Crime Junkie - MURDERED: Jessica Heeringa
Episode Date: February 24, 2020Jessica Heeringa was a young mom in her mid-20’s who was trying to provide for her family. She was smart, loving, a hard worker… and then, in 2013, she vanished from her job at a local gas s...tation. For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crimejunkieapp.com/library/. Sources for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/murdered-jessica-heeringa/Â
Transcript
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Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Britt.
And today, I want to tell you a story about a woman who could have been any of us.
She was a young mom in her mid-20s who was trying to provide for her family
while also trying to beat that quarter-life crisis
and figure out what direction she really wanted to take for her future.
She was smart and loving, a hard worker,
and then she just vanished without a trace.
This is the story of Jessica Haringa.
Does it save you supporting the worker?
Maybe not at all.
Or do you ask yourself,
who is this woman?
Be.
Jessica Haringa didn't have any time to go out and party on weekends.
She has a three-year-old boy and her fiancée, Dakota, recently lost his job.
So while Dakota stays at home to watch their son Zevon, Jessica treats Friday night like
she usually does by going to work the closing shift at an Exxon gas station on Sternberg
Road in her hometown of Norton Shores, Michigan.
As anyone who's worked any sort of retail or food service job will tell you, it's not
a job for everyone.
But Jessica tries to look on the bright side.
She's a smart girl, very introspective.
She's literally known for journaling every single day, and she loves math.
She wants so badly to continue her education, but with a young kid at home and bills to
pay, that's just not an option right now.
And life for her in Norton Shores is duller now that Jessica's mom, Shelley, and one
of her sisters, Samantha, have both moved out of town.
So really, she gets a lot of her social interactions from the people who frequent the gas station
where she works.
Like, she literally got this whole group of regular customers who will wait for her shift
before they actually come in.
So on the night of April 26, 2013, one of Jessica's regulars, this guy named Craig,
swings by the Exxon station to fill up his car.
Now, it's dark outside, like 11 p.m., and since Craig doesn't need to buy anything
else besides gas, he just goes ahead and pays at the pump.
Now, there's one problem.
The pump doesn't activate.
Now, this doesn't worry him because he knows Jessica's getting ready to close up for the
night.
She's probably like taking inventory or something.
So he goes inside to let her know that he's here, like, I need the pump back on.
But when he walks into the front door of the store, he's a little surprised when he doesn't
see Jessica behind the counter.
So he starts looking around, poking his head around the corners to see if maybe she's in
the office or something, but nope, not there.
Eventually Craig starts calling out her name.
But when she doesn't answer, he begins to search everywhere.
I mean, she's not stocking the shelves.
She's not in the backwalking cooler.
The store is totally empty, as if she just, like, up and left.
But then Craig notices something strange.
Thereby the cash register is Jessica's purse, and even stranger is how the register drawer
is open just a hair.
And right at that moment, Craig knows something is very wrong.
And listen, I know we talk about intuition a lot on this show, and we always encourage
women to trust theirs.
But guys, this 100% goes for you too.
Because as Kayla Fortney reported for ABC News 13, Craig actually almost left the gas
station just to go fill up somewhere else.
Because again, even though it didn't feel right, he also didn't see any signs of a struggle.
Nothing seemed out of place.
Like he felt kind of silly thinking something bad had happened.
But his gut instinct told him something bad did happen.
Something was very, very wrong, and that he needed to call police.
Again, intuition does not have a gender crime junkies listen to yours.
Yeah, it really is so important.
And like you said, this guy was one of her regulars.
Like, he knows Jessica, and this is not something that she would just walk away from.
Exactly.
So Craig decides to call 911.
And here, I'll play you a clip.
I want you to listen and tell me what you think.
Ms. Geegan, 911, where's your emergency?
I don't know if it's emergency.
I just got to work on the Exxon gas station on Sturmburg Road, kind of Sturmburg, Novan-Avon.
Okay.
And there's nobody here who wouldn't allow me to pump gas, so I had to walk inside.
There's nobody.
There's a car here.
There's another car out front, but it is very suspicious why there's nobody here.
Yeah, and even in that call, you can kind of hear him second-guessing how serious this
is.
You don't even know if it's an emergency.
Yeah, right.
He's not panicking, but you can hear in his voice that he just has this bad feeling.
He'd rather be safe than sorry.
And sure, it's true she could have left early, but I mean, we know a little bit about her
background, her fiance's unemployed, the family's struggling financially as it is.
There's no way she would have risked her job by closing the store early.
Now, likely have seen so many times before, the normal protocol for police in that area
would be normally to not get involved until 24 hours after Jessica was first reported
missing.
But the scene at the gas station was so suspicious that they knew right away something was wrong
here.
So, other than Jessica just not being there, what about the scene made it look out of the
ordinary?
Well, when the first officers arrived, they find Jessica's jacket in the back room and
her car still in the parking lot, which Craig pointed out in that 911 call.
Plus, we had talked about the cash register was just a little bit open, all of the money
is still in the cash register, and there's $400 in cash in Jessica's purse, which makes
it incredibly clear to everyone that robbery wasn't the motive here, and they decide to
make the decision to call in more officers and treat this as a potential crime scene,
like a crime probably was committed here.
So when they bring in the team to process the gas station, they notice that outside
behind the gas station, like out near the back door, there is this small, dark stain
smudged into the concrete that looks very much like it could be blood.
So they get a small sample, they want to send it off for testing right away, I mean they're
trying to confirm whether this is Jessica's, is it an assailant, is it blood at all?
Or completely unrelated, like I mean it could have happened anytime, you know blood doesn't
tell you when it was dropped there.
So those results are going to take a while, but even without those results, officers are
fearing the worst, that the target wasn't money, merchandise, it really was Jessica.
So right away, they make two calls, two people that they want to talk to, that they think
might hold the key to Jessica's location.
The first is Jessica's fiance, Dakota.
As soon as Dakota gets a ride to the gas station, police immediately want to know his whereabouts,
like where were you this entire night, can you account for them?
And Dakota's like, listen, I was home the entire night with our son, and I don't know
that I can prove it, like it was just me, but also we only have one car, which is sitting
here in the gas station parking lot, I wasn't able to get here.
Now there's nothing in Dakota's past that really stands out to them, as far as they
know they have a great relationship, they're going to verify his alibi with cell records,
but we know that that's going to take time, but for now, they don't really see any reason
to continue to look at him.
So the second person that police call was Jessica's manager, Sue.
Police want to know where she was, more to see like, okay, I mean, where were you at
the time, but has anything been going on recently, any weird activity, any weird customers, like
is there anything you can tell us that can give us a clue as to where Jessica might be
now?
Here's the thing, in a real stroke of luck, Sue just happened to be driving by the gas
station that night, like totally unrelated, and she was driving by at the perfect time,
because she says that at the time she drove by, she saw a strange minivan parked out back
of the gas station, and she tells police this was so suspicious to her that she actually
stopped and watched because she thought someone was maybe stealing from the station.
So her and her husband, who was in the car with her, pulled over to check it out and
see what was going on.
They didn't see any theft, like nothing crazy that jumped out, but they did see something
weird because a man went to the trunk of the vehicle to adjust something quickly, and then
he gets back in the car, like in the driver's seat and slams the door.
Now Sue didn't get a license plate number, but she could see that it was a Silver Town
and Country minivan, which is confirmed later by security footage is like from the nearby
businesses in the area.
Did she see the driver at all?
So not a great look at the driver, but good enough that she can describe him as a white
male about six feet tall. She said that he was most likely between 30 and 40 years old
with this wavy, light brown hair, and you know, she says, I don't recognize him like
I don't recognize him as a regular customer. He's definitely not someone that works there,
but she does sit down with a sketch artist who puts together a composite of the man driving
the van. And here I'm going to send you the sketch really quick.
It looks like he kind of has small features like a thin nose, maybe smaller, close set
eyes, the wavy hair is there. I mean, it's pretty much the guy you described.
Yeah. And I don't know if we're just getting like a little jaded. I feel like all of these
are blending together.
We've seen a lot of composite sketches lately.
Has anyone actually ever been caught by a sketch because I'm feeling like no. Right.
So this isn't like a lot, but here's the thing. It is better than nothing. So they show this
composite sketch to the family and Shelley and both of Jessica's sisters don't know who
this guy is. He looks nothing like Jessica's fiance, Dakota doesn't look like anyone she
might have known.
So police are forced to release the sketch to the public on May 1st in hopes that someone
is going to see this, maybe recognize this guy and then come forward.
So hundreds of people see this sketch and actually hundreds of people actually come
forward with tips and the Norton shores police are swamped, trying to follow up on every
single one, but they are coming up empty handed every single time and they're not able to
find any trace of where Jessica might be.
Okay. But like, what about the security footage from that night? Like, I feel like that'd
be the first place that you would go to find anything out.
So you think, but that's the thing. At the time, there were no security cameras at the
Exxon and Jessica's mom, Shelley, actually used to kind of pester her about that. But
Jessica would always tell her like, listen, it's fine, but now it's not fine because
there's no way for police to tell what happened in that store or who was there. So without
the footage, investigators take the transaction records from the cash register and they use
that to start putting together a timeline of what was happening at the station before
Jessica went missing.
So one of the detectives on the scene that night tells the producers of disappeared episode
someone is watching that Jessica had sold a lighter at 10.54 p.m. Then Craig makes
that 911 call at 11.07 p.m. So there's just a 13 minute window of time that's unaccounted
for. Yes, but I mean, really, it's even smaller than that because he got there, looked for
her and then called. Yeah, I mean, you're right. Like we're talking seven, eight minutes
maybe. Wow. Well, and it's even crazier because the manager drove by like right around the
same time, right? Yeah. So she drove by when this guy's fan who were presuming possibly
took Jessica is like behind you. So what are the odds? Now, even though everything seems
like it should be in our favor, we have a super small window, we have somebody who
was there during that window of time. But even with that, we're just coming up empty.
But then on May 8th, this is 12 days after Jessica went missing, investigators get the
news that they've been dreading. They get their DNA test results back. The dark stain
found behind the gas station was in fact blood. And as Kevin Dolak reported for ABC News,
the DNA was a match for Jessica.
With real fear for her safety now that the abduction seemed so painfully likely, the
search goes into overdrive. But even with multiple searches in and around Norton Shores,
all of the tips about the man in the sketch, the silver minivan, again, it's as if Jessica
vanished into thin air. The days go by, time stretches on, fewer and fewer people start
coming forward with tips. And eventually every lead is exhausted and the case goes cold.
But the police never forget about it. They can't forget. The lead investigator on the
case, Detective Mike Casher, keeps in touch with Jessica's mom, Shelley, over the passing
weeks and months to keep her updated on any new developments and to basically reassure
her that they're never going to give up no matter how long this takes. And then, about
seven months after Jessica vanishes, Detective Mike is talking to Shelley and Shelley happens
to ask him about Jessica's journal, the one that she wrote in every day. She never read
it and so she's asking Detective Mike, like, listen, were there any clues in there? Like,
did anything come of it? Like, it had her most inner thoughts. It had everything about
her life. Like, I was for sure thinking that something would be in there. And Mike's totally
blown away because he's like, what journal? I've never heard of a journal. Now, this
makes no sense to Shelley because right when Jessica went missing, Shelley brought up that
journal to Dakota and she asked him, listen, make sure that that gets turned over to police
right away. This is going to help them find her. I really think so. Now, Dakota had promised
her that he was going to turn it right over to police, but now she's learning that after
seven months, he has been keeping that journal a secret. And there's no reason to have kept
that a secret all this time unless he has something to hide.
As it turns out, Jessica's fiance has been hiding more than just her journal. Detective
Mike sits down to read it as soon as Dakota hands it over and almost from the moment he
opens the book and turns the very first page, it becomes very clear that Dakota is not the
loving and sensitive partner Jessica's mom and sisters believed him to be. Mike is honestly
shocked that her journal hasn't been destroyed or quote unquote lost because Jessica had
written many times about Dakota being very, very controlling and how unhappy she was with
him. Like it is all there tucked away between the pages where Jessica kept the secrets of
her life and her relationship in between caring for her son and working full time. She'd
stolen the precious few moments she had to herself each day, usually late at night after
she traded her contacts for her glasses to journal. And that is where she poured her
whole heart out about how trapped she felt how she worried about her future slipping
away and how her relationship with Dakota had started to sour into something really
ugly. And listen, Jessica's family is horrified. Like they've known Dakota for years and they've
spent so much time with him. And through all of that, they had no idea that any of this
was going on that he was being controlling that sometimes he could be physically abusive.
Like they thought that he and Jessica just shared the car and a cell phone to save money,
but they actually learned that it was a way for Dakota to track where Jessica was going
and who she was communicating with. Yeah. And we know that monitoring communication
is a major red flag when it comes to like domestic violence and a relationship not being in
a good place. Oh yeah. I mean, it's practically textbook. Plus, Dakota was restricting her
friendships. Like he doesn't like Jessica being on Facebook. Isolation. He's in control
of all their money even though Jessica's the one actually going out and making the money.
So all of this is really like troubling signs of a controlling partner. Now, most worrying
of all though is an incident that Jessica wrote about where Dakota had her pinned down
like on the ground and their little son, Zeven, like toddled into the room right when all
of this is going on. So even Zeven wasn't like immune from all of this. Like he got
exposed to it as well. So by this time and we're seven months out, police have gotten
his cell phone records. They've confirmed that he was at home where he said he was the
entire time with the only cell phone they owned. It was the only car they had. He wouldn't
have had any way to get there. So though he has a good alibi, now that they have this,
I mean, this pains him in a totally new light. So armed with this knowledge and, you know,
the whole idea that he had lied about this and lied about their relationship, police
actually name him a person of interest for the first time. Now, when questioned by police,
Dakota admits, okay, yes, like I had jealousy issues. Yes, our relationship was super rocky,
even though we put on a happy face for friends and family. But I swear, I never got physical
with her. I had nothing to do with her disappearance. And as shady as he looks, as bad of a guy,
as he might have been, Dakota's alibi still holds firm. The Norton Shores chief of police
spoke to MLive several months after the journal gets put in police's hands. And he says, listen,
while no one's been officially cleared since Jessica's gone missing, Dakota has fully
cooperated with the investigation. And even though no one really likes him, and even though
her family is super upset about how they feel like he betrayed them, like even they can't
argue with the evidence, like we've got to move on from Dakota. The answers don't lie
with him. The problem is, we still don't know where they lie. And again, her case kind
of goes cold without Dakota ever being indicted with anything without any charges being filed
against him. There's just nothing. Lead after lead like this tapers off until investigators
are at a standstill. While Jessica's absence leaves a gaping hole in their lives, her family
tries their best to carry on and to keep hope alive if nothing else than for her son. But
months and months pass with no new updates, no new leads and no sign of Jessica. Until
February of 2014, about 10 months after Jessica vanished, when investigators finally get a
break. Detective Mike told disappears producers back in 2016 that an investigator in Kalamazoo,
Michigan, which is just over 80 miles south of where Jessica went missing, calls him
with a familiar story, a story about a young blonde woman in her early twenties who was
abducted, dragged into a car and then sexually assaulted. Now, this woman survived the ordeal
and she was able to eventually identify her attacker, someone that they had in custody
named Brad Allen Mason. Now, when they looked at him, he was a convicted sex offender and
a serial rapist with a penchant for kidnapping and indecent exposure. Okay, I mean, that's
kind of familiar, but Jessica was never found. This girl got away. And without having Jessica,
we have no idea if she was sexually assaulted. I get that they're looking for any connection
at this point, but this doesn't feel very close.
No, I agree. I mean, I think again, we're 10 months out. I think they're grasping for
straws a little bit here. It's at least a little similar with her. We know this guy
had a van, she's gets this other girl gets put into a vehicle. But I think what caught
their attention was him in relation to the sketch that they put out here. I'm going
to send you Brad's picture and you can tell me what you think.
I mean, I guess I can kind of see it like the eyes are maybe similar, but I mean, it's
definitely not a dead ringer. No, no. And I mean, it looks like he's a kind of similar.
I get why they need to look into it. I mean, especially again, 10 months out, they probably
don't have much to go on. You might as well look into this. So when they look into this
Brad guy, he had a pretty long criminal record, which I read about on Fox 17's website. So
he spent six years in jail for felony criminal sexual conduct involving children before he
was let out on parole in October of 2012. So according to disappeared when he was paroled,
and I think this is the interesting thing, he was actually released to a halfway house
not in Kalamazoo, where that crime took place, but in Norton Shores. So his halfway house
was literally right down the road from the Exxon gas station where Jessica worked. And
not only that, but many of his victims matched a very similar profile. They were petite young
white women in their mid twenties with blonde hair and glasses, which was exactly Jessica's
like profile. So I think it was that the idea that she matched his victim profile so much
and he was right down the street when this happened that really had police looking at
him. Now, listen, police like us, they're not convinced, but this is the best tip that
they've had in a long time and considering Brad's record, it wouldn't be a shock to
anyone if he had re offended. So with that in mind, they want to find Brad Mason right
now so they can follow up on what could be the lead that they've been waiting for and
like maybe just maybe they're going to get to bring Jessica home. But the problem is
he's deceased. Brad actually died by officer assisted suicide after he drew this very realistic
fake gun on police when they came to arrest him for like his most recent rape charge.
So he had like modified this gun to make it look super realistic. He took off. They always
have that orange tip when they're fake. He took that off. He refused to drop it numerous
times when officers asked him to. And even in death, Brad is still considered a person
of interest in Jessica's disappearance. Like during this time, he's not there to talk to
him. They can't rule him out. But because they can't talk to him and they can't rule
him out, eventually like the heat kind of dies. Everything cools off and they can't
find anything like that was left behind to actually link him to her or prove that they'd
ever even met. And it was extra hard to try and connect him because Brad didn't keep any
kind of credit cards. He kind of kept off of the grid. So there was no way to use his
like credit history or any kind of like electronics to like tie him to the area or the place like
literally he just like seemed like it could work. But that was all they had, just like
this feeling that maybe it could be him. So once again, investigators are forced to watch
as a promising lead turns cold. Time keeps passing. And in Jessica's absence, the entire
herring of family is kind of in flux at this point. John Hogan reports for ABC 13 that Dakota
gets arrested in 2014 and charged with several counts of selling marijuana. Jessica's sister
Samantha, who by this time has moved back to Norton Shores, files for custody of their
son Zeven. And I mean, she has this nasty custody battle with Dakota and Dakota's parents.
Eventually she wins. And the family, you know, it's a win, but they're still trying to like
struggle to adjust to their new normal without Jessica. And then in 2016, just two weeks before
the third anniversary of Jessica's disappearance, something terrible happens. And the aftermath
of this changes everything for the herring of family and the investigation.
Early on the morning of Saturday, April 16, this is 2016 now, a 16 year old girl in Muskegon
County, Michigan is abducted. So this girl who's never been named publicly because she's
a minor is lost after leaving a party. And so she's walking along the side of the road
to find her way back towards her house. When according to ABC 13, this guy pulls over and
asks if she wants to use his cell phone. And she's like, yeah, sure, like I'm lost, that's
great. And she reaches out for it. But instead of giving it to her, this guy says, no, if
you want to use it, you have to come in my car first and use it in here. So I mean, again,
she's lost. She feels a little bit desperate. She's eager to call a friend or her parents
like anyone familiar, anyone who can come help her. So she gets into his 2013 Silver
Chrysler Town and Country minivan. That's the same van that the manager saw parked
behind the gas station, right? Exactly. As soon as she gets in, she is flooded with
fear when the man locks the doors and pulls a gun on her before driving off. The terrified
girl manages to jump out of her attacker's moving car and she runs screaming to a nearby
house for help with the man calling after her. Now, thanks to a good Samaritan who lets
her in their house, she survives this awful encounter with only some minor scrapes and
bruising. So once police are called, she's able to describe both the car and her would-be
kidnapper. According to a reporter for the Detroit Free Press, this girl was also able
to pick out a face in a lineup right away with zero hesitation, which gives police an
actual name. Jeffrey Willis. He's 46 years old, a married man who works an overnight
shift at the local Herman Miller factory in Muskegon County. Now, while Jeffrey doesn't
have a criminal record or any convictions, he's shown up on law enforcement's radar
sort of intermittently for years for like little stuff like speeding tickets or whatever.
And he also had the cops called on him back in 2007 for filming a woman in a Sam's Club
parking lot without her consent. That's a little bit different than the speeding ticket.
Yeah. And once he got fired from a job as a janitor at an elementary school for looking
at porn on the school's computer, which if you ask me warrants more than a firing, like
it feels like a red flag of some sort. Yeah. How do I know? So even without a record, something
about Jeffrey sets off alarms in investigators minds because his name sounds awfully familiar.
So they go back and look in their files and sure enough, there is the connection waiting
for them in one of their most baffling cold cases. It literally sends shivers down their
spines because not only was Jeffrey Willis questioned back in 2013 in connection with
Jessica Herring's disappearance, but police had also made note in the case file that at
the time he had recently cleaned out his van. And Britt, I think he looks even more like
the sketch than Brad did. And here I'm going to send you a side by side. You guys can all
see these pictures as well. They're on our blog if you want to check them out, crimejockeypodcast.com.
But what do you think? Oh my gosh, yes, way more than Brad. Like those small features
that I mentioned earlier, the narrow nose, the close-set eyes, they're all there. And
his hair color even matches better than Brad. Yeah, this is way more of a fit to me. I
mean, before I couldn't see what they were looking for between Brad and the sketch, I
100% see the similarities between Jeffrey and the sketch. Definitely. So police get a search
warrant looking for anything to connect Jeffrey to the attempted kidnapping of this 16-year-old
girl. Police like turn his house and his van inside out and what they find is honestly
horrific because what looks like a typical family car on the outside is actually a nightmare
on wheels because according to the Detroit Free Press, police turn up rope, handcuffs,
a long-metal bar with wrist restraints attached to them, chains, a ball gag, pornographic
material of women tied up, Viagra, video cameras, sex toys, lubricant, rubber gloves, batting
gloves, a.22 caliber semi-automatic pistol with ammunition, and the serial number filed
off. He had insulin, five syringes, and one, including like it was full with liquid that
they suspect was a sedative. Now, Jeffrey's house in Muskegon is just as creepy. I saw
pictures of it while I was researching for this case and it is so much worse because
I feel like of how normal it looks. Like from the outside, it's this bright yellow door,
a welcome mat, like nothing that would make me side-eye it by driving by. But again, the
inside is just as disturbing. And it's Jeffrey's computer that gives police a window into a
truly disturbed mind. Police recover child pornography off the computer along with hundreds
of videos of women being raped, tortured, and even murdered. So according to Crime Watch
Daily, some of the videos are acted out like clearly fictional, but some are not.
Oh, so he's like in the snuff films. Oh, yeah. I mean, Jeffrey is the worst of the absolute
worst. And you have to think that the girl who got away, I mean, she really got away
with her life. I mean, it seems to me like Jeffrey's dark and like messed up fantasies
were starting to spill over into his daily life. And he was basically trying to turn
his fantasies into the worst kind of reality. On May 17th, this is about a month after that
girl escaped her abductors clutches. Jeffrey is arrested and charged with attempted kidnapping.
During this time, he's also officially named as a person of interest in Jessica's disappearance.
But as the investigation continues, police find evidence that he's connected to multiple
cold cases in the area, all involving missing or murdered young women, including the unsolved
shooting death of a woman named Rebecca Bletch. Now, Rebecca was shot in the head back in
2014 in broad daylight. She was literally just jogging in Dalton Township, Michigan,
which is about 20 miles north of where Jessica went missing from. And according to the Detroit
Free Press, shell casings were found near where she was killed and they were matched
to the 22 caliber pistol that was found in Jeffrey's van. Now, in addition to that, police
also find her DNA on the batting gloves in Jeffrey's van as well. And that alone is enough
for a murder charge. And Jeffrey is ordered to stand trial for Rebecca's murder. Now,
meanwhile, back in Norton Shores, Jessica's family is waiting anxiously. Obviously, they've
heard about this guy, they've heard about the possible connections. And after three
agonizing years with no trace of Jessica, honestly, at this point, it's almost like
too much for them to hope that this connection is going to bring them answers, even though
they're glad this killer's off the streets. Like, I think they're looking at this with
like a little bit of skepticism, like we don't want to get our hopes up again. But they're
about to learn that police found something on Jeffrey's computer that could lead them
to the answers that they have waited so long for.
In addition to the whore show of snuff films and child pornography on his laptop, right
there on his hard drive is a folder labeled VICS, VIX, which police believe is short
for victims. And there in the folder is a subfolder labeled JLH. Jessica Herringer.
JLH, right? Jessica Lynn Herringer. JLH. Inside that folder are more child porn and pictures
of Jessica herself. Now, the file name ends with DZ13, like clearly a code, but not like
a genius code. It's pretty easy to decipher because basically each letter corresponds
with a number. And Lynn Moore reported for MLive that, you know, they basically matched
everything up. They decipher the code again, not a super hard code to decipher. But when
they look at that code, DZ13, and they attach numbers to that, like A is one, B is two.
DZ13 is four, 26, 13. That's the day that Jessica disappeared. Now the folder with Jessica's
name isn't the only one. There's another folder labeled RSB for Rebecca Sue Bletch with copies
of articles about her death, a wanted poster for her killer, and according to MLive, a
picture of a woman in a bikini laying on a bed who looks a lot like Rebecca. Now this
file has got the same type of code at the end as well. In this case, it was FZ plus C14,
which using the same formula is 62914, which unsurprisingly is the day that Rebecca was
murdered. Now we've talked before about how serial killers keep trophies of their victims.
So with only two victims, Jeffrey doesn't appear to be a serial killer quite yet, but clearly,
I mean, we can see him leaning towards sadism and the documentation on his computer seem
to point to someone well on their way. And beyond the van and the photos of Jessica on
his hard drive, witnesses come forward during the investigation who actually placed Jeffrey
at the gas station where Jessica worked, not necessarily at the time that night, but like
in the past. So there was this reporter, Heather Walker, who talked to some of Jeffrey's coworkers
for W-O-O-D-T-T-V, and they recall going with him to that exact Exxon station where Jessica
worked, since it was just about five minutes away from the factory that he worked at and
right on the way between where Jeffrey lived and the factory where he worked. So it was
like a natural spot on his commute. Exactly. And we know now that for sure he went there,
he would have had some interaction with her. Now another one of Jessica's regulars, a
woman named Brenda, puts Jeffrey inside the Exxon store the night before she disappeared.
This is according to court records. This Brenda woman says that she was talking to Jessica
and she was actually sharing the same fears that Jessica's mom, Shelley, had just about
her working at the store so late at night that, you know, your boyfriend should be looking
out for you. Like, aren't you scared? And at this point, while she's having this conversation,
Brenda says that Jeffrey interrupts their conversation and said that Jessica's customers were looking
out for her too. And she said that when she saw Jessica like hear this, that she could
tell Jessica seemed totally put off by his response, like literally started shivering.
She was so put off by it. And Brenda said that she got such a bad feeling from Jeffrey
and Jessica's reaction that she waited in her car outside the gas station just to make
sure that he left that night. And the very next day, Jessica disappeared. In September
2016, this is three months after he's charged for Rebecca's murder, Jeffrey is officially
charged with Jessica's murder as well. Okay, I mean, that's great news, but we still don't
have Jessica. No, and that is still the big hurdle to overcome. We all know that nobody
cases are so much harder to take to trial. And often they don't ever get taken to trial
for that reason. I mean, just look at the case of a list attorney. Sarah has been fighting
till she's blue in the face. She believes it is so clear what happened to her sister,
which just a little side, I don't know if you all know this, but Sarah has started her
own podcast called Voices for Justice, where I mean, she's going into so many details about
her sister's case. It's insane. You have to listen. But in that case, there's still
no body. So police and prosecutors are hesitant to take that to trial. And I mean, it's got
to be a concern in Jessica's case as well for the DA. I mean, it's, it's, you know,
you're trying to prove motive, you're trying to prove where she is. And I'm sure it leaves
a door open for the defense to be like, you can't prove that she's been murdered. Yeah.
How can you, how can you send this guy to jail if you can't even prove that, that she's
for sure dead? Maybe she walked away. So while, you know, it's great that we have this guy.
We're pretty sure we know what happened. I think we still need to find Jessica so that
it can like be a shoe end to take to trial. But more than anything, Shelly, Angel, Samantha,
they want to know where Jessica's body is so that they can finally bring her home and
lay her to rest. But nobody knows where it is. Well, maybe I should say it's never been
recovered because there actually might be someone who does know. According to court
records, Jeffrey's first cousin and good friend, a guy named Kevin Bloom, got a phone call
on April 27th telling him to come over because they were going to have a party at Jeffrey's
place at this place that he owned and maybe have a foursome. So, you know, like usual
party. So Kevin says that he went over there. He goes into the basement where he sees Jeffrey
standing next to a naked woman that Jeffrey called quote, gas station girl. And he said
that this woman was laying face down on a sheet with her hands tied. And once he got
a good look at the woman's face, Kevin says that it was for sure Jessica. She had some
kind of like liquid coming from a wound on her head. Presumably, I mean, I would think
blood and he says that she wasn't moving and from what he could tell she was already deceased.
And Jeffrey admitted to him, at least he says that, yes, I sexually assaulted her. Now he
also saw that there was a video camera set up as if Jeffrey had been making like some
horrific videos of his own. I mean, we talked about the stuff on his computer. I mean, again,
I think he was clearly taking it from a point of being an observer to now act acting this
out. Yeah. And making his own stuff that, you know, who knows where he was planning
on distributing this if he didn't already. Right. In the end, Kevin says he actually
helped Jeffrey bury Jessica's body. Okay. So he knows. So I think he knows, but eventually
later on, Kevin claims that he made all of this up, which to me feels super shady, because
normally I mean, we've talked about this in so many cases, like there's usually this
like order to how confessions come about. And usually it's like, I had nothing to do
that. I had nothing. I kind of know someone. Okay, I kind of did it. And he's almost like
in the reverse. Like he comes out being like, I did everything. I helped her bury, bury
her body. And now he's saying like, JK made it all up. So I have a hard time believing
that maybe he didn't like get cold feet about like his confession or being honest, but honest
the first time around or not, according to M Live, there's no body in the burial spot
that Kevin takes investigators to. I mean, so he did lead them somewhere. And I don't
know the order of how this happened. Maybe he led them there. They didn't find her. And
he's like, JK made it up. I mean, but they had cadaver dogs, which indicated that like
a body had never been there at all. And in addition to that, the location doesn't match
like cell phone tower ping. So obviously they're trying to like match up his story with some
kind of evidence. And none of it is adding up. Plus in another shady move, Kevin wipes
all of the data off of his phone and removes the hard drive from his computer before he
hands them over to police, which just makes me think that he's lying even more. Like,
if you're being honest, if you had nothing to do with it, what are you afraid of them
finding? I mean, in my mind, I almost think he was involved in the same kind of stuff
that Jeffrey was.
Yeah. And plus like cousins are not, no one just calls up a friend to come over after
they've committed a ton of sex crimes and murder in their basement unless they know
for a fact that person is going to participate or help them in some way. I'm with you. I
think he had possibly something more to do with Jessica's murder than he's letting on.
And police agree. So eventually Kevin is charged with lying to police and being an accessory
after the fact. Now he just spends a little over a year in prison and gets five years
probation and an electronic GPS monitoring to track his whereabouts at all times. Now,
even though this GPS tracker doesn't lead police to the truth, I mean, I'm sure there
was part of them that hoped like he would go back to the scene of the crime. And Kevin
has never admitted the real location where Jessica is buried. It doesn't matter in the
end because Jeffrey Willis is found guilty of murdering both Rebecca Bletch and Jessica
Herringa. And he is sentenced to life without parole in both charges. Despite a new tip
that came in just in October of 2019, Jessica's body still hasn't been found. And although
Jessica's murder is in prison for his crime, you know, I don't feel like her family is
fully at rest because this past December, another Christmas passed without bringing
their daughter home. And I think every day they're going to continue looking for her
until they can find Jessica.
If you want to see any of the pictures we mentioned in this podcast, you can find all
of that along with our source material at our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com. And be
sure to follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast. We'll be back next week with a brand new episode.
But if you want a lighter story, stick around for profit of the month.
Okay, Ashley, you said we have a lighter story about a profit, which we do, but I am going
to give a little content warning. It gets a little bit dark in the middle. There are
no, I see your face, there are no dead dogs. This is the first time we've ever recorded
a profit of the month in person. I might get to see you cry.
So today we are talking about Cash, who was submitted by his mom and our listener, Jenna.
And Jenna was finally moving out of her apartment and getting ready to rent a house with A Gridge,
which like the dream. And she could finally get a profit of her own. And there are chickens
on the property. So she was like, okay, I have to make sure that like the dog is going
to be okay with chickens and like Charlie would kill all the chickens. I love Charlie.
Yeah, I love the chickens. My dogs are the same way.
So she found this cattle dog who actually was living in a foster home that had chickens
and she called the shelter and they're like, oh yeah, he'd be great. Why don't you come
out and meet him here at the shelter? We'll get the foster dad to bring him in, all that
stuff. So she talked to her boyfriend. He was like, well, like, it's going to be hard
to find a rescue who's good with chickens. Like we should probably at least check it
out. And of course, checking it out turned into filing adoption papers and so they meet
this dog. And Jenna knew immediately that she was in love with him. She called her boyfriend
who brought over his dog Sage to make sure like the pups both got along. And they were
a perfect match. Sage, her boyfriend's dog loves playing fetch. And this puppet had zero
interest in fetch, but loves herding dogs. Oh, playing fetch. So they got along right
off the bat. And like, what more could you ask for? It was getting late. They couldn't
adopt him that night, but she was talking to the foster dad and he was like, you know,
this dog just came available for adoption. She's like, Oh, like that's cool. He's like,
yeah, he was in evidence in like in evidence. Yeah, like I read this in my little crime
junkie ears perk up. And I'm like, that makes the dog better. I really like imagine him
in the box taped up with his little eyes. I know that's not how he was. And the foster
dad doesn't know much or doesn't disclose much then he's just like, yeah, he was part
of an animal abuse case and he was evidence in the trial. And so Jenna was like, Oh, that's
really interesting. But like, they couldn't felt the paperwork that night, the shelter
was closing. So she's like, Okay, tomorrow, we're going to finish this and I'm going to
get this dog. And content warning right now, because we're going to find out why this dog
was in evidence. And it gets a little bit gruesome. So the next day when Jenna's filling
out all the paperwork to adopt, the desk clerk at the shelter was like, Hey, like you heard
this dog was in evidence. Do you know anything about it? And she was like, no, you know,
they just kind of mentioned it. And the desk clerk kind of goes through what had happened
to this dog. And this dog had been owned by these two guys. And he hadn't been neutered.
And a lot of times when that happens, dogs, especially male dogs, get a little aggressive
a little aggressive and a little bit curious. They don't always stick around. They wander
around looking for looking for someone to hook up with. I get it. You do. I have no idea.
But I've had dogs, you used to roam looking for people to hook up with. I've known your
whole life. You don't get it. Anyway, these two guys decided that they're going to they're
going to, they're going to take care of this problem by stop. I don't, I'm done. Okay.
By taking matters into their own hands. And it didn't go well. Oh my God. And they basically
left him for dead. But this is how brave this profit is. He's basically bleeding out. He
runs to the neighbor's house. The neighbor recognizes the dog confronts these two guys
who tell the neighbor what they did. And this angel neighbor goes right back into their
house, calls 911. And immediately there's a deputy arresting the two guys and rushing
this dog to an emergency vet where his life was saved. So he, he, are you okay? I just,
who does that? Monsters. Like I even have here in my notes, like supposedly these men
are humans. I am not convinced of it to be completely honest. Do you have any idea like
any follow up on these guys? I think, are they still in prison or did they get a slap
on the wrist? Cause I'm about to, I'm about to flip this table. Jenna actually included
a couple of links about the case and about the trial. They didn't, they were charged
with it. I believe they were convicted. But this dog goes into foster care and starts
getting rehabilitated. He eventually comes up for adoption and Jenna gets to adopt him
and he's having his best life. And actually a couple days after she adopted him, the news
found out that this dog who was involved in this case got his forever home and they came
out and did a story on him. And we'll link to that on our website. And the dog seems
cash now and he's living his best life. He's come a long way. He had a huge fear of men,
which like, uh, same now, I mean, completely understandable, right? And really, really bad
separation anxiety. He one time literally chewed through the front door when Jenna wasn't
at home because he's so badly wanted to be with her, but he's such a good dog. He has
amazing recall. Like he comes back to her all the time and like, she's like, I don't,
this dog would have never run away. I don't understand. Like if that's the reason they
did that horrible thing, that's not the dog she has today. And he knows a ton of tricks
and he recently started agility training, which he absolutely loves. And he also loves
stuffed animals. And this like, oh, just made me warm all over. He doesn't shred them like
my dogs do. Like my dogs systematically dismember them, like take all the stuff. No, they take
a leg off. Like, no, like it's, it's dark. They take one leg off and then they take another
leg off and they take the art. It's like a reverse hangman. But he loves them and he
doesn't shred them. He has a huge basket full. And whenever Jenna grabs a leash to take him
on a walk or a car ride or to the dog park, he goes to his little basket and shuffled
around to find a new stuffy friend to take on their adventure with him and tries to take
a special stuffed animal friend with him wherever they go. And his favorite is this giant chicken
stuffed animal. And it's literally almost the size of cash himself. Let me show you a picture
real quick. Oh my God, he's adorable. He's so cute. And we'll have pictures of cash and
his big chicken friend on our website, along with the links to the news articles about
this amazing brave little puppet. I just feel like there's so much we can learn from dogs
about forgiveness. Oh, 100%. This dog has no reason to ever look at a human kindly,
let alone lovingly. I mean, we say it all the time. Like we don't, we don't deserve them.
But just that, I mean, I know he's scared of men, but that he would like open up. I'm
going to cry. You are going to cry. Just that he would like open up to another human
and like he still wants to be around her when he like knows what we're capable of, you know,
as like a species. Like some of us are so awful. Yeah, I love dogs. So I reached out
to Jenna and like Ashley said, we don't deserve dogs, but dogs still need homes and there
are millions of people out there who love them and give them loving homes. So I reached
out to Jenna to talk to her about the shelter that she got cash from. And she sent me a
link, gave me their names and I found a senior puppet, which like, you know, we love you.
Yeah, we special place in our heart. And I'm not sure I know how to pronounce his names.
I might butcher up his name is LeKai. He is a border collie Newfoundland mix, which is
just like the biggest, fluffiest boy in the world. Again, he's a senior, so he's a little
bit older. But he was surrendered because his owner had to move into a residency that
didn't allow dogs or at least dogs of his size because he is a big boy. But if you just
want like a new best friend and get to skip like all the puppy stuff, this is your boy.
He's a social butterfly. He loves other dogs and other people. And he really just wants
to hang out with you. And I think like something great about like those bigger breeds and especially
as they get into their senior years, like they don't actually require a ton of physical
activity. Unless you consider cuddling a physical activity, like Charlie is I mean, even though
Charlie is almost nine now. I mean, he's like requires so much physical activity. He's a
hard dog to own. But like some of these older, especially big breed dogs, like they just
want to lay around. They want a Netflix and cuddle. Yeah. Yeah. And something I was reading
about LeKai in his like little profile, which again, we'll link to on our website is his
adoption fee has been reduced, which usually means that he's been there for a while or
he's harder to place, which a senior big dog is. So you guys check out LeKai, check out
the rescue he's from. We'll link to all of it at our website. Check out the shelter where
he is. It's in Phoenix, Oregon. They have a ton of adoptable pets there. You know, just
open your heart, open your heart, open your home.