Vanished: The Mysterious Disappearance of Johnny Gosch and the Unyielding Quest for the Truth

John David Gosch, born on November 12, 1969, was a paperboy in West Des Moines, Iowa, who went missing between 6 and 7 a.m. on September 5, 1982. He is believed to have been abducted. As of 2023, no arrests have been made, and the case is currently classified as cold but still open.

Johnny Gosch Goes Undetected

Johnny Gosch set out to deliver newspapers in West Des Moines, Iowa before sunrise on September 5, 1982, accompanied by his dachshund, Gretchen. Typically, his father would accompany him, but on that particular Sunday morning, John David Gosch had chosen to stay home.

At approximately 7:45 a.m., a neighbor called the Gosch household, expressing dissatisfaction that his newspaper had not been delivered yet. This was unusual, as Johnny Gosch should have completed his newspaper route by that time. While the family dog had returned home, Gosch had not.

His newspaper delivery wagin was found but not him

John Gosch immediately began searching the neighborhood for his son.

John and his wife, Noreen, alerted the local police in a state of panic. However, since there was no note or ransom demand, the police assumed that Johnny Gosch had run away. By law, they could wait 72 hours before declaring him missing and commencing a search. But Gosch’s parents were convinced that something was gravely amiss.

The Search Begins

Once the police started investigating Johnny Gosch’s disappearance, a disturbing sequence of events began to emerge. Other paperboys who had worked with Gosch on the morning of his disappearance claimed that they had seen him talking to a man in a blue Ford Fairmont around 6 a.m.

Johnny’s parents

According to Iowa Cold Cases, Noreen recounted what witnesses had told her about the incident: “The man turned off his engine, opened the passenger door, and stepped out onto the curb where the boys were getting their newspapers ready.”

She added that the man had asked her son for directions, and Johnny Gosch had started walking away after speaking to him.

However, there were discrepancies in the various accounts, and nobody could remember many details about the man or his car, which left the police with few leads to pursue. Disappointed with the authorities’ response, Gosch’s parents took matters into their own hands.

John and Noreen Gosch made television appearances and distributed over 10,000 posters with their son’s image. When a 13-year-old boy named Eugene Martin disappeared while delivering newspapers just 12 miles from where Johnny Gosch was last seen two years later, the Gosch family’s story gained even more widespread attention.

A relative of Eugene Martin worked for the local Anderson & Erickson Dairy, and they requested the company print photos of Martin, Gosch, and other missing children from the region on their milk cartons. The dairy accepted the request, and the idea quickly gained popularity nationwide.

Johnny on Milk Carton

The Gosches’ extensive efforts to locate their son ensured that news of his abduction spread far and wide, prompting people to contact the police with sightings of the young boy.

Reported Appearances of Johnny Gosch Throughout the Years

Numerous individuals from different parts of the country claimed to have spotted Johnny Gosch in various locations for several years following his disappearance.

According to OurQuadCities, in 1983, a woman in Tulsa, Oklahoma reported that Gosch had run up to her in public, saying, “Please, lady, help me! My name is John David Gosch.” Before she could react, two men dragged the boy away.

Two years later, in July 1985, a woman in Sioux City, Iowa, received a dollar bill along with her change while paying at a grocery store. The bill had a short note written on it that read, “I am alive.” Beneath the message was Johnny Gosch’s signature, and three separate handwriting analysts confirmed its authenticity.

It wasn’t just strangers who claimed to have seen Johnny Gosch – even his own mother, Noreen, stated that he visited her home one night, 15 years after his disappearance.

Johnny

In March 1997, Noreen Gosch received a knock on her door at 2:30 a.m. When she opened the door, she saw a stranger standing with her then 27-year-old son, Johnny Gosch. Noreen claims that her son opened his shirt to reveal a unique birthmark and then spoke with her for over an hour.

She later informed The Des Moines Register, “He was with another man, but I have no idea who the person was. Johnny would look over to the other person for approval to speak. He did not disclose where he was living or where he was going.”

According to Noreen, Gosch asked her not to report to the police as it would endanger their lives. She stated that her son was kidnapped and sold into a child sex trafficking ring, and a suspicious package that appeared outside her door almost a decade later seemed to confirm her suspicions.

Unexplained Photos and Allegations of Sex Trafficking

Although both the police,and John Gosch Sr., who divorced Noreen in 1993 – are skeptical of her claim that Johnny Gosch visited her in 1997, a set of photographs sent to her in 2006 made them reconsider her statement.

In September of that year, almost exactly 24 years after Johnny’s disappearance, Noreen discovered an envelope on her doorstep containing three photos of several boys who were tied up. One of them resembled Johnny Gosch.

Upgraded photo of Johnny

The police were shocked and promptly investigated the origin of the photographs, but they eventually concluded that they were not Gosch. The photos had reportedly been investigated previously in Florida and were found to be from a group of friends messing around. However, Noreen finds it hard to believe.

Although Noreen Gosch was frequently dismissed as a mourning mother driven to extravagant conclusions and stories after her son’s disappearance, her determination helped ensure that missing child cases were handled with greater attention.

In 1984, Iowa passed the Johnny Gosch Bill, which mandated that police immediately investigate missing child cases, rather than waiting for 72 hours. Although young Gosch has never been discovered, his legacy as one of the first milk carton children and as the driving force behind important legislation may have saved numerous others from his fate.

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