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Astonishing Legends

The Missing 411 Part 1

Astonishing Legends

Scott Philbrook

History, Society & Culture

4.6 β€’ 9.8K Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 11 September 2022

⏱️ 120 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A former police officer turned writer David Paulides was taken aside by a National Park Ranger and told about a disturbing trend he'd realized. This Ranger asserted that some people were going missing in the woods under mysterious circumstances leaving only puzzling evidence of their fate. Of course, people often go missing in the wilderness in tragic yet explainable events but what was troubling to these Rangers in the field was the apparent pattern of the occurrences and the subsequent investigation efforts. This Ranger stated that during the first seven to ten days of a disappearance, an all-out Search and Rescue effort ensued with plenty of press coverage. However, after the first week of a rescue mission, it seemed to them that the media stopped reporting, the search for the missing was called off, and no further explanation from the authorities was provided. An additionally alarming trend was that there seemed to be a reluctance or inability on behalf of the National Park Service administration to collect and provide statistics on these disappearances to the public, either through inefficiency or secrecy. If this is true, perhaps it could be from a concerted effort to diminish negative publicity and undue fear about park visitation, or maybe there is something dreadful the officials don't want the public to know. Whatever the reason, this conversation launched Paulides on a now decade-long quest for answers. Initially, after over three years and 9000 hours of investigation, utilizing his 20 years of experience with law enforcement and the resulting connections, Paulides had gathered enough information to compile two books. Missing 411 – Western U.S. was released on March 1, 2012, documenting the stories of people who have vanished in seemingly bizarre instances in the western half of the United States. The second book, Missing 411 – Eastern U.S., was published later that month and contains special sections on unusual outdoor activities that seem related and a master list of all missing persons. Currently, ten books have been published, with more on the way, two documentaries have been produced, and Paulides' ongoing popular YouTube channel continues to highlight cases. In addition, retired police officers, Search and Rescue experts, and other professionals are dedicated to continuing researching and investigating these cases with their CanAm Missing project. One worrisome aspect they've found is that in many situations, parents, relatives, and friends of the missing believe that their loved one was kidnapped or abducted, sometimes with them nearby. No matter the causal connections or whether you think these disappearances are sad but commonplace, a conspiracy lurks or is nonexistent; the fact is that these cases are real, and the victims' stories deserve and need to be told. The question remains, however – what is really going on out in the wilds, and is it something sinister we should all be worried about?

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Listen to the astonishing junk drawer exclusively at patreon.com slash astonishing legends.

0:05.0

They're not always up to good, so she and the dead of night.

0:09.0

Sometimes it will be a kangaroo, wild pigs or even a lost cow.

0:13.0

He feels and can hear things in the brush chasing him out.

0:17.0

Speaking of supernatural, do you want to talk about the watermelon?

0:20.0

The grimo was a witch.

0:22.0

People might be interested. You know what's going on there, right?

0:25.0

I mean, when you see their cuteness on social media, they're like, well, how could these be such terrible creatures?

0:31.0

Clint Eastwood did all his own stunts.

0:33.0

That's weird. I don't know why that popped back up because I did that.

0:36.0

Oh, okay, good.

0:40.0

Estonishing legends. We like to think quip, hello fresh, square space, simply safe.

0:45.0

One dream are contributors at patreon.com and you are listeners for making tonight's show possible.

0:52.0

In late 2011, an author named David Politas released a book called Missing 411,

0:59.0

Western United States and Canada.

1:01.0

In its pages were cases of hundreds of people from all walks of life who had seemingly just banished while visiting national parks in western North America.

1:10.0

Politas, a former police investigator himself, was motivated to look into these cases by a park service ranger that approached him with concerns that not only was this happening,

1:20.0

but that there may be some kind of cover-up related to concealing the data on it.

1:25.0

He even posited that it almost seemed like a policy that significantly reduced search times in these cases.

1:31.0

To what end?

1:33.0

Could it be to reduce the impact of them on the national stage?

1:37.0

Or perhaps to avoid the truth behind the disappearances?

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