logo
Eerie 'serial killer' link that could finally solve the mystery of beloved news anchor who vanished into thin air

Eerie 'serial killer' link that could finally solve the mystery of beloved news anchor who vanished into thin air

Daily Mail​19-07-2025
Investigators are continuing to probe a suspected serial killer in connection with the disappearance of news anchor Jodi Huisentruit, as they work to establish whether a compelling lead is a vital clue or just an incredible coincidence.
Huisentruit, 27, was running late to her shift at KIMT-TV in Mason City, Iowa, on June 27, 1995, when she was abducted from the parking lot of her apartment complex sometime after 4am.
Where Huisentruit was taken next - and by whom - remains a mystery three decades on. She was declared legally dead in 2001, but no arrests have ever been made and her body has never been found.
For years, police closely guarded evidence and leads, leaving her loved ones in the dark - fearful her disappearance would never be solved.
However, a new documentary, Her Last Broadcast: The Abduction of Jodi Huisentruit, has pulled back the curtain on the case for the first time, offering an unprecedented glimpse into the investigation and revealing never-before-heard evidence.
One potential suspect profiled in the documentary is Christopher Revak, an accused killer first linked to the case in 2009.
Revak took his own life in jail the same year while awaiting trial for the 2007 abduction and murder of Rene Marie Williams, 36, in Missouri. He was also suspected of murdering Deidre Harm in 2006 after meeting her at a bar in Wisconsin.
In the years since, investigators have probed whether Revak could be tied to other deaths across the Midwest. To date, he's been tentatively linked to five homicides spanning 14 years, including Huisentruit.
Christopher Revak, who killed himself in a jail cell in 2009 after being booked on homicide charges, is being re-examined by cops
In December last year, Mason City Sergeant Terrance Prochaska traveled to Wisconsin to meet with investigators overseeing the Harm case and compare notes on Revak - a meeting captured in Her Last Broadcast.
The most compelling thread tying Revak to Huisentruit is the fact that Revak's first wife - identified only as 'Jennifer' - was living in Mason City in 1995, when the news anchor disappeared.
Stranger still is the fact that Jennifer lived in the same duplex as Huisentruit's close friend, John Vansice, who is believed to have been the last known person to see her alive and is a leading person of interest.
'This is one of the biggest coincidences in this case,' Prochaska said in the documentary.
According to Prochaska, Jennifer moved to Mason City from Wisconsin Dells after breaking up with Revak, who stayed behind in Wisconsin.
Jennifer moved out of Vansice's building three months before Huisentruit disappeared. She told police that Revak, then 23, never visited her while she was living there.
However, law enforcement's working theory is that Revak may have traveled to Mason City to come looking for Jennifer and began surveilling the address, unaware she'd moved out.
The night before Huisentruit disappeared, Vansice claimed she came to his apartment to watch a recording of a surprise party he'd thrown her weeks earlier.
'If Revak was looking for [Jennifer] or found her and was stalking her to see if she was living here, the chances of him running into Jodi are very high...it gives me chills,' said Prochaska.
Like Jodi, the remains of Revak's only confirmed victim, Rene Williams, were never found - but traces of her blood discovered in his car pointed to his guilt.
In the documentary, investigators say Revak's method was to target women he'd just met, often approaching them late at night in parking lots, in Midwest towns where he had connections - akin to how Huisentruit was abducted.
Douglas County Sheriff Chris Degase, who investigated Williams' murder, said the coincidence of Revak's ex living next to Vancise is too great to overlook.
'I've been in law enforcement for 32 years, and I do not believe in coincidences,' said Degase.
'I believe in my gut that he killed Jodi. What are the chances of his girlfriend living next door?'
Prochaska is trying to put Revak in Mason City on or around June 27, 1995 - the day Huisentruit's trail went cold.
Records place Revak in Wisconsin on June 17 and on July 9, 1995, but his whereabouts between those two dates are unknown.
The investigation into Revak remains ongoing.
In a statement to FindJodi.com last year, Wisconsin Rapids Lt. Scott Goldberg said his department and MCPD 'wouldn't be doing Jodi justice' without reexamining Revak.
John Vansice is also extensively investigated in Her Last Broadcast.
Vansice, Huisentruit's closest male friend in Mason City, was more than 20 years her senior. He had a boat he often took Huisentruit out on, which he'd christened 'The Jodi' in tribute to her.
He quickly became a person of interest after turning up outside her apartment, telling police he was likely the last known person to have seen her.
According to Vansice, then 49, she stopped by his home on the evening of June 26 to watch a video of a surprise birthday party he'd thrown for her weeks before.
The last person to speak with Huisentruit was her producer at KIMT-TV, Amy Kuns, who called her at 4am the following morning to let her know she'd overslept for work.
Husientruit apologized and said she'd be at the station within 15 minutes. She was due on air at 6am.
However, Huisentruit never showed. Somewhere between leaving her apartment and trying to get into her car, she was attacked by an unknown assailant.
In the documentary, it's revealed that Vansice called KIMT-TV early on the morning of Huisentruit's disappearance, and asked her producer, Amy Kuns: 'Hi, is Jodi there? It's John.'
Kuns, who was about to go on air in Huisentruit's place, said she informed him she wasn't, to which Vansice responded: 'Well, where is she? Why isn't she at work?'
According to Kuns, that call came in before she was aware that anything grave had happened to Huisentruit, and before police came to KIMT to report her abduction.
'That stood out in my memory as very odd,' Kuns said, 'because I don't remember him calling on any other day.'
Later that morning, Vansice drove to Huisentruit's apartment with two others to speak with police.
One of those two people appeared in the documentary anonymously and claimed Vansice's first words that morning were 'Jodi's gone' - before the news had broken about her suspected abduction.
Sergeant Prochaska said that in the immediate aftermath, Vansice made himself almost too available to investigators. He was incredibly forthcoming but suddenly stopped cooperating when certain, unspecified details stopped adding up, Prochaska said.
Fellow anchor Amy Johnson, who worked for KGAN-TV at the time, claimed that Vansice would call her station religiously asking for the latest 'scoop' on the investigation.
'He did all the things the perpetrator of a crime would do,' said Johnson.
Vansice also allegedly called KIMT after undergoing a polygraph test to tell them he'd passed and would be 'popping champagne' in celebration, which those who knew Huisentruit found odd.
Prochaska declined to comment on whether or not Vansice passed his polygraph, adding only that he's never been ruled out conclusively.
Vansice quickly left Mason City for Arizona, where he died in December 2024 from Alzheimer's. He maintained his innocence until his death.
Her Last Broadcast reveals that MCPD is taking a close look at another person of interest, Brad Millerbernd, the ex-husband of one of Huisentruit's closest friends, Patty Niemeyer.
In the series, Niemeyer describes how, after watching an ABC 20/20 special on the case three years ago, she got a gut feeling that her ex-husband may have been involved.
Niemeyer claimed Millerbernd always had an odd preoccupation with Huisentruit.
Millerbernd has not been accused of any crimes related to Huisentruit and has denied any wrongdoing in his conversations with law enforcement. He declined to speak in the latest ABC documentary, and the Daily Mail's attempts to reach him have been unsuccessful.
At the time Huisentruit vanished, Millerbernd was living three hours from Mason City in Winstead, Minnesota, property records show.
He often commuted to Iowa for work, driving a white Ford Ecoline van.
Millerbernd's van stood out to Mason City detectives.
Several witnesses reported seeing a mysterious white Ford van parked outside Huisentruit's apartment moments before she was abducted.
Identifying the owner of that vehicle has long been seen as the key to cracking the case.
According to Prochaska, Millerbernd also matches the description of a man who was spotted lurking around Huisentruit's apartment building two days before she disappeared.
In 2022, Prochaska quizzed Millerbernd over the phone about his memories and interactions with Huisentruit. According to the detective, Millerbernd admitted to taking Huisentruit out to dinner in the fall of 1994, picking her up in his white van.
Niemeyer also claimed Huisentruit reached out to her on June 5, 1995, to inform her that Millerbernd had 'tried to contact her.'
Millerbernd was interviewed by Prochaska again in October 2024.
He agreed to submit DNA voluntarily and undergo a polygraph, but the results of those tests have not yet been released.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ghislaine Maxwell's bombshell televised testimony on Epstein's crimes indefinitely postponed
Ghislaine Maxwell's bombshell televised testimony on Epstein's crimes indefinitely postponed

Daily Mail​

time23 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ghislaine Maxwell's bombshell televised testimony on Epstein's crimes indefinitely postponed

Ghislaine Maxwell 's testimony before Congress has been postponed pending her Supreme Court case, a top Republican has announced. Maxwell, the longtime friend of deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, is currently serving a 20-year-sentence for sex trafficking and has been in talks with the Trump administration and Congress about dishing on the disgraced financier and his relationships. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer announced last week that Maxwell was set to testify before the panel on August 11 at the Tallahassee facility where she is serving her prison sentence. But now he says that planned sit-down interview is no longer happening. Comer said in a letter he would agree to delay their meeting so that Maxwell's pending Supreme Court petition regarding her case could move forward unswayed by her testimony to the oversight panel. 'On July 30, the U.S. Supreme Court noticed that your petition for writ of certiorari will be considered at its conference on September 29. In light of this notice, the Committee is willing to delay your deposition until a date following the Court's certiorari determination,' he wrote. The Supreme Court's new term begins in October. 'Your testimony is vital to the Committee's efforts regarding Mr. Jeffrey Epstein, including the 2007 non-prosecution agreement and the circumstances surrounding Mr. Epstein's death,' the chairman wrote to Maxwell. Just days before, Comer denied the imprisoned woman's request for immunity should she speak to Congress. 'The Oversight Committee will respond to Ms. Maxwell's attorney soon, but it will not consider granting congressional immunity for her testimony,' a spokesperson for the panel told the Daily Mail this week. The letter from Maxwell attorney David Markus to the committee - which was obtained by the Daily Mail - contains a list of conditions for her to testify, including immunity. 'Public reports—including your own statements—indicate that the committee intends to question Ms. Maxwell in prison and without a grant of immunity. Those are non-starters,' the letter states. 'Ms. Maxwell cannot risk further criminal exposure in a politically charged environment without formal immunity. Nor is a prison setting conducive to eliciting truthful and complete testimony. The potential for leaks from such a setting creates real security risks and undermines the integrity of the process.' Markus further requested that the committee provide Maxwell with their questions in advance of their sit-down. He also asked to push their meeting until after Maxwell's pending case before the Supreme Court in which she's alleging wrongful legal treatment and until after a subsequent secondary challenge so that her testimony does not sway those cases. Maxwell may want to talk, according to a source who told the Daily Mail last week 'she would be more than happy to sit before Congress and tell her story.' But there were always going to be strings attached to testimony from such a notorious target. The rush to hear from Epstein's protege comes as some lawmakers have raised concern about her protection. 'I requested that she be placed immediately into protective custody and monitored - by guards as well as working surveillance equipment - around the clock, so that our justice system does not again fail the survivors of this Epstein nightmare,' Republican Rep. Scott Perry posted on X. Trump's closest allies and rank-and-file members - including House Oversight Chairman James Comer, Anna Paulina Luna, Nancy Mace and Marjorie Taylor Greene - backed the subpoena for Maxwell. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has met multiple times with Maxwell at the behest of Trump to discuss what she knows about the Epstein files. Blanche offered Maxwell a limited form of immunity during her two days of questioning over former lover and billionaire pedophile Epstein last week. She apparently requested what's known as 'proffer immunity' so that anything she revealed couldn't be used against her at a later date. This form of immunity is specifically provided to people under investigation or facing charges to determine the value of a possible witness. Maxwell has already been tried and convicted. However, Maxwell's lawyer David Oscar Markus said after her questioning: 'There have been no asks and no promises.'

Anaconda, Montana shooting: Manhunt underway after multiple shot
Anaconda, Montana shooting: Manhunt underway after multiple shot

BBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Anaconda, Montana shooting: Manhunt underway after multiple shot

A suspect is on the run after multiple people were shot in the US state of Montana, authorities Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) said it was "responding to a shooting where multiple parties have been shot at a business in Anaconda, MT". The Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Law Enforcement Center named the suspect as Michael Paul Brown in a social media post, adding he is "believed to be armed and dangerous".Anaconda is a town of almost 10,000 people in southwestern Montana, 109 miles (175km) west of Bozeman. This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.

Manhunt launched after 4 killed in a shooting at a Montana bar
Manhunt launched after 4 killed in a shooting at a Montana bar

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Manhunt launched after 4 killed in a shooting at a Montana bar

Four people were killed in a shooting at a Montana bar Friday, authorities said as they launched a manhunt for the suspect. The suspect was last seen in the Stump Town area, which is just west of Anaconda, according to a Facebook post by the Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Law Enforcement Center. He was believed to still be armed, the Montana Highway Patrol said in a statement. The shooting happened around 10:30 a.m. on Friday at The Owl Bar, according to the Montana Division of Criminal Investigation, which is leading the investigation. The agency confirmed four people were pronounced dead at the scene and that it was an active investigation. Authorities have yet to release details about what led to the shooting. More than a dozen officers from local and state police converged on Stump Town where they appeared to be searching for the suspect in the woods. His home in Anaconda had already been cleared by a SWAT team, according to the Granite County Sheriff's office. Anaconda is about 75 miles (120 kilometers) southeast of Missoula. The owner of the Firefly Café in Anaconda said she locked up her business at about 11 a.m. Friday after getting alerted to the shooting by a friend. Two hours later, she was still waiting for an all clear before reopening. 'We are Montana, so guns are not new to us. For our town to be locked down, everybody's pretty rattled,' café owner Barbie Nelson said. 'It's a small town, so we all probably know someone who was there' at the shooting. she added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store