May 25, 2005 New Leads In The Johnny Gosch Case
A
cold case is heating up. Iowa paperboy Johnny Gosch vanished without a
trace in 1982. But, now, after KWWL's story last month on Johnny's
disappearance, there is new information on the case. A
private investigator working Johnny's disappearance believe his
kidnapping was part of a government conspiracy. The investigator shared
new evidence with KWWL and it could be the break needed to solve this
case. That evidence includes a recorded phone call that has never been
heard publicly, until now. During
the early morning of Septmeber 5, 1982, Johnny Gosch was kidnapped
from a West Des Moines neighborhood while delivering newspapers.
It was silent, quick and professional. "This man has told us that at
the end of their investigation that there were 834 kids involved that
were kidnapped," says James Rothstein. He's talking about a
former CIA agent who must remain anonymous. Rothstein
is a former New York City police detective, now a private investigator
working the case for Johnny's mother, Noreen. And within the last
couple weeks, Rothstein has uncovered new evidence linking Johnny's
kidnapping to child prostitution. "It basically came down to one thing
and one thing only. You know, it was money. These kids were being
grabbed to satisfy the malignant, twisted, you know, evil depravity of
very powerful individuals who have the money," he says. Rothstein
is talking about individuals who would spend as much as $10,000 to have
sex with young boys and girls. And this new evidence points to the
involvement of U.S. government officials. "They were using kids to
compromise people. And what better way to compromise somebody than get
a young boy with a politician or some powerful person that may be in
the military or whatever and then you can compromise them and get what
ever you want." Last
month, people on the internet and investigators like Rothstein began to
believe a man who passed himself off as a White House reporter and
known male prostitute Jeff Gannon could be Johnny Gosch. And while
Gannon's true idenity still can't be confirmed, Rothstein says the more
clues he uncovers, the possibility Gannon may be Gosch increases, "When
you look into the whole abduction of Johnny, what happened, the
cover-up that took place, the way the kidnapping was done, this was a
professional job and it fits the profile that I have seen over the
years as a professional investigator." Rothstein
now believes the CIA was involved and tried cover it up. "They were
assigned to find out if there was an agency connection to it and I
am quite sure that if they found one, to make sure it was covered," he
says. And Rothstein's
CIA informant says this: "We were specifically ordered to clear our
name. This would make the American agency look pretty s****y, like
we're all a bunch of f***ing child molesters." We
requested information from the CIA on three kidnappings, Rothstein and
his CIA informant believes to be connected. The first, Johnny
Gosch, the second, Eugene Martin, kidnapped on August 12th, 1984 while
delivering newspapers in Des Moines. And,
Jacob Wetterling, who was kidnapped from his Minnesota neighborhood on
October 22, 1989. The CIA responded to our request with this
letter, denying the agency investigated any of the kidnapping cases.
But, Rothstein's source says, it happened often and for big bucks, "You
could order one of these kids, it was $2,500 to $3,000 up front then
you had the balance of another $3,000 to $3,500 or $4,000 upon
completion. In some cases, you know depending on the circumstances you
can probably get them at the bargain basement price of $1,500, but
most I think that we ever saw was for the bondage and the freaky
s**t and that was an even $10,000 and people...these people would hand
that money out like it was candy." That's
what it cost to hire a kidnapper to steal a child like Johnny off the
street. And with new details like this coming to light, catching
Johnny's kidnappers might actually happen. "Any police agency that
would get involved in this case to this date can solve that case. The
case is more solvable now, than it has even been. And that case should
have been solved hours after it happened. The witnesses are out there.
You yourself have found some," Rothstein says. Those
witnesses include a Black Hawk County woman who wishes to remain
anonymous. She sent Rothstein this packet of information. "Johnny Gosch
is mentioned in it involving something that was going on years ago in
the Waterloo, Iowa area," Rothstein says. And
while Rothstein hasn't determined the significance of the possible
Waterloo connection, he says it's just as important as the phone
conversation he had with a CIA agent. "That's solid information
with names. That's where you start investigating and that should have
been done years ago," he says. And
because it wasn't, Rothstein continues to make phone calls, and work
leads, hoping his next big break is the one that solves the mystery
behind the disapperance of Johnny Gosch. For
the past month, Rothstein has been tracking the activities of two
suspects he believes could be responsible for kidnapping Johnny Gosch.
We couldn't name them in our report because it hurt the investigation.
We agreed to keep their identities secret so we could tell you this
story.
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