DOE: ID 'Frog Boy' Winston 'Wint' Maxey III
DNA: ID
AbJack Entertainment
4.7 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 25 September 2023
⏱️ 30 minutes
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Summary
Episode 82 DOE: ID 'Frog Boy' Winston 'Wint' Maxey III
In July, 1971, some teen boys in Coos Bay, Oregon discovered a decomposed body along Snedden Creek. The body was that of a young male in his teens, but due to the condition of the body, the medical examiner could not determine exactly when the young man had died, or a cause of death, but he deemed it suspicious. Since there was no ID with the body, investigators didn't know who the young man they affectionately called 'Frog Boy' was, and their efforts to find someone missing from the area that matched his description came up empty.
For decades, the identity of Frog Boy remained a mystery until advancements in DNA & genealogy finally provided a name for him; Winston 'Wint' Maxey III, who had left his Idaho home as a teenager, and had never been reported missing. It turned out that his daughter, who was born weeks after Wint went missing and put up for adoption, had been looking for him.
Questions remain to this day. How exactly did Wint die, and was he the victim of foul play?
'Frog Boy' now has his name back; it's Winston 'Wint' Maxey III, and this is his story.
If you have information about Wint, please contact Captain Patterson at (541)-396-7820 or call the Coos County Sheriff's Office at (541) 396-7800.
Visit the Facebook page set up by Wint's Daughter Lori to learn more about the case, or to help Lori find more information on her father.
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Transcript
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| 0:46.3 | I'm On July 26, 1971, three young teen boys, ages 13 and 14, were driving some horses from one pasture to another on a large farm outside Kukil in Coos Bay, Oregon. They took a break near a small bridge over Sneddon Creek. Sneddon Creek is a small tidal creek, and there, lying face up in the shallow water |
| 1:29.2 | was a body. Police responded to the scene and fished the body out of the water. This was a delicate |
| 1:34.8 | job as the body was extremely decomposed. State medical examiner Dr. William Brady examined the body |
| 1:41.7 | and concluded that the remains belonged to a male teen, |
| 1:45.4 | approximately 14 to 18 years of age, on the shorter side at somewhere between 5 foot 4 and 5 |
| 1:51.2 | 6, and with a medium build of 145 to 155 pounds. He had shoulder-length brown hair. His eye |
| 1:59.9 | color couldn't be determined. |
| 2:01.9 | Unfortunately, the M.E. was also unable to determine the cause of death because of the advanced state of decomposition. |
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