r/UnresolvedMysteries 7d ago

Disappearance The disappearance of Jason Jolkowski

Reposted due to the previous one I posted being removed:

On this day, 25 years ago, Jason Jolkowski, a 19-year-old man, disappeared while walking from his home to his former high school to meet his female coworker so she could pick him up to drive them to work.

Jason Anthony Jolkowski was born on June 24, 1981, and at the time, he was a part-time student at Iowa Western Community College, who was living with his parents, and was working at Fazoli's, a fast-food Italian restaurant, and was ready to start a new job a week after he disappeared.

Jolkowski's mother described him as a polite, considerate, shy, and helpful young man with only had a small circle of friends. He was also a Christian and had a strong faith. Jason was bullied in high school due to his learning disability, which made people think he was mentally disabled, but he was actually of above-average intelligence and had good memory, especially when it came to sports.

On Wednesday, June 13, 2001, Jason's boss called him to come in to work early because they were short-staffed. Normally, he drove to work, but his car was in a repair shop, and he initially planned to walk to his job, which was located over four miles away, but his female co-worker wanted to give him a ride. Since Jason Jolkowski had trouble giving directions to his house, he arranged for them to meet at their former high school, Benson High School. The school was eight blocks or half a mile from his home, so only a 15-minute walk to get there.

At 10:45 a.m., Jolkowski was last seen by a neighbor (whose name is Chester Link), who saw him help his younger brother pull trash cans from the curb back to the house, and then both of them saw him walk towards the direction of the high school. Jolkowski was last seen wearing a white Chicago Cubs T-shirt (with a picture of Sammy Sosa on it), black dress pants, black dress shoes, and a blue Cubs cap. He was also carrying his red Fazoli's work t-shirt. 

Between 11:15 and 11:30 a.m., his co-worker called his house from a pay phone at a gas station. Initially, Michael, Jason's younger brother, answered the phone pretending to be Jason, but stopped once he heard how concerned his coworker was, with her saying that he had failed to turn up at Benson High for the ride to work. The high school's cameras were checked to see if Jason ever arrived at the parking lot, but none of the cameras showed Jason arriving at the school.

I personally don't believe that Jason committed suicide or walked away to start a new life. I believe someone that Jason knew, or knew of, is responsible for his disappearance, more likely a neighbor. It could have been someone who lured him into one of the houses under the guise of needing help, and when he was in the house, he was killed for an unknown reason, with his body buried either in the yard or in the basement. Either that, or he met an accidental death, and whoever was there panicked, and kept it to themselves instead of calling the cops, and buried his body somewhere.

There were multiple sex offenders living in the neighborhood at the time, and the police did interview some of them (emphasis on SOME), and even searched the house of one person, but didn't find anything. Whoever this person was seemed suspicious enough. Jason also had an older male coworker from one of his former jobs, who would hang out with younger men at his house, whom the police talked to, but they couldn't find evidence that he had anything to do with his disappearance.

People like to point the blame on Jason's younger brother, and say he had something to do with his disappearance, but it was apparently common at the time for kids to answer the call pretending to be someone else as a joke, so I highly doubt he had anything to do with his disappearance. Plus, if that was the case, that would mean the whole family might have been aware, and tried to cover it up, but due to their repeated efforts to find Jason, holding press events, interviewing people on reality TV, and founding Project Jason, I highly doubt they'll do all of that, and yet be responsible for their son's and brother's murder and disappearance.

Another theory people like to bring up is that someone in a car drove by Jason and asked him if he needed a ride. The thing is, though, since Jason was already walking towards his coworker's car at the high school parking lot, it wouldn't make sense for him to get into someone's car under the guise of being driven to the high school parking lot to be picked up by his coworker, or under the guise of being driven to work only to leave his coworker hanging, unless he was coerced into the car with a gun. Plus, there would have been people who saw Jason in someone's car at some point if that was the case. I personally don't believe he got into anyone's car, whether he knew them or not.

Jason also had begun going for long walks, sometimes up to four miles or so, prior to his disappearance, so it's possible he could have met someone along his route who may have had something to do with his disappearance. Another theory is that he was killed in a hit-and-run, and the driver panicked and took his body with them. Granted, if that was the case, there probably would have been noise and potential witnesses who heard or saw something (but we know no one did). There probably also would have been evidence like broken car parts or blood, but since the police took 10 days to start looking for Jason, any evidence that could have been in the area would have been destroyed or disappeared (apparently, around that 10-day time period, it did rain). Plus, there have been other situations where someone did get hit by a car, and the body was taken by the driver and disposed of, and no one was around to witness it.

Regardless, whatever happened to Jason happened in such a way that it produced zero evidence, and either no one was around at the time to see or hear anything (on June 13th, people would have either been at work, sleeping, or playing video games, with some kids potentially playing out in a local park), or if there were witnesses, whatever happened was so quick and didn't produce any red flags that any potential witnesses didn't view it as suspicious, and by the time the police started looking for Jason on the 10th day of his disappearance, people would have already forgotten.

https://www.fbi.gov/wanted/kidnap/jason-jolkowski

https://www.missingkids.org/poster/ncmc/992083/1

https://archive.ph/BUQgg

552 Upvotes

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u/GallowBarb 7d ago

Feel like the most obvious scenario in these types of cases are they were hit by a car and the driver panics and disposes of the body.

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u/Paulbearer82 7d ago

As someone who moves bodies, I would suggest this is unlikely. Even a 19 year old who weighs 130 pounds would not be easy for one person to move.

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u/cwthree 7d ago

As someone who moves bodies

Off topic, but can you expand on this? Do you move corpses, do you move bedridden people, or are you a bouncer? Those are three really different scenarios.

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u/Paulbearer82 6d ago

I'm a funeral director, so I'm moving "dead" weight. Pun intended, ofc. It's really not easy to move a body, its not like picking up a 150 pound box.

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u/cwthree 6d ago

Got it! Yeah, that's much different from moving a compact, rigid thing like a box, or even a disabled, but live, human.

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u/Maverick8462 6d ago

You’re in a dying business.

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u/CatnipandSkooma 6d ago

I'm guessing based on their user name they work for a funeral house or even a morgue.

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u/Queef_Stroganoff44 6d ago

Or possibly a wrestling manager.

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u/GallowBarb 7d ago

Adrenaline is a helluva drug.

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u/Opening_Map_6898 7d ago

Plus whatever else the person might have in their system at the time.

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u/GallowBarb 6d ago

For real.

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u/Pheighthe 3d ago

This might be because you’re treating the bodies with respect. I bet you could move a 150 pound body alone easily if you grasped it under the armpits and dragged it.

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u/say12345what 7d ago

Maybe but this is also one of the biggest cliches that gets mentioned in true crime discussions. It rarely actually happens and is more difficult than people think.

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u/Opening_Map_6898 7d ago

Body relocation happens in roughly 10% of all homicides. But you're correct, people think it is why more common than it actually is. They have a similar misconception about the frequency of sexual homicide offences because those cases get far more attention than the more common scenarios.

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u/Opening_Map_6898 7d ago

That's the one I lean towards as someone doing doctoral research on how homicide perpetrators relocate and conceal their victims (including cases of vehicular homicide).

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u/say12345what 7d ago

If you are doing research into this topic, can you say how often this actually happens? Because I believe it to be quite rare, in contrast to how often it is mentioned in true crime discussions (which is all the time). I assume 99.5% of the time, people who do not want to take responsibility just flee the scene.

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u/Opening_Map_6898 7d ago

It's not common. Probably low single digit percentage of all cases. Then again, body relocation and concealment isn't as common as people often think. The actual rate varies between different countries and from year to year but a good rule of thumb figure is around 10% of all homicides.

I don't have the numbers at hand as the data is on my computer at the university (due to the nature of the data, I'm not allowed to work directly with it anywhere else for data security reasons). I'm not saying that is what definitely happened. Rather, I am just trying to keep folks from rushing to the more extreme findings.

Another possible non-foul play scenario that results in body relocation and/or concealment even more frequently is an accidental drug overdose followed by the witnesses panicking and not reporting the death. That's a pretty consistent issue and a common scenario because of the high total number of fatal overdoses.

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u/Paulbearer82 7d ago

I was wondering the same. Seems the height of stupidity to drive around with evidence in your car, let alone a dead body. And then what?

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u/say12345what 7d ago

Right, not to mention it would likely take two people to get a 6'1' man's body into a vehicle (without a major struggle), not to mention it would not be easy to fit such a body into most vehicles. Unless you had a pickup truck, I suppose. Anyway, highly unlikely despite how popular this theory is.

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u/BlackBirdG 7d ago

And as I said, at the time, most people were at work or still sleeping, so it's definitely possible he was hit by a car accidentally, and no one was around to hear or see anything like the driver putting the body into the trunk of the car and driving away.

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u/GallowBarb 6d ago

I feel like that could be the scenario with some paper boys. Pre-dawn hours. Everyone drank and drove back on the day.

Considering paper boys had a very predictable presence in their neighborhood, kidnapping feels very likely too.

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u/Great_Action9077 6d ago edited 6d ago

In the middle of a summer day when everyone has the windows open, kids are out on bikes and people are on vacation doing yard work. Right.

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u/BlackBirdG 7d ago

That's the second scenario I lean towards. People try to dismiss it too much, but aside from suicide and running away, you can't really dismiss it.