

When he saw the rings, it sent a chill up his spine. Attempts by Forum News Service to obtain information related to that property revealed it is owned by TC&I Timber Company, LLC. Without the divorce, the spouse is entitled to everything.Ī background check on both Alan and Sandra Jacobson also revealed an address in rural North Carolina. Had a divorce occurred prior to the disappearance, Sandra Jacobson’s 16-year-old son would have been included in conversations regarding her assets. Dividing assets - including land - would have likely been included in any divorce procedures. According to Connor, Alan Jacobson’s family estate had been put in both of their names. The potential initiation of a divorce mattered for a number of reasons. So, I would have had some fuel at least, or some things to work off of.” “And if Alan and her were talking about the divorce, she would have wrote it down. “That’s where I would like to have had that… that journal, because that would have been things she wrote down, you know,” Connor said in a recent interview with Forum News Service. Despite obtaining a subpoena for the information, Connor wasn’t able to confirm Alan Jacobson’s claims. In the end, he found no evidence of an impending divorce.Īlan Jacobson’s claim that he and his wife sought couples counseling through her state employment benefits package didn’t check out, either. He attempted to track down any potential records of the initiation of a divorce procedure - a search that led him to multiple county courthouses. That’s what Connor was trying to figure out. While Alan Jacobson claimed the shoe could likely belong to his son, John Jacobson's brother and grandmother said the shoe was far too large to belong to the 5-year-old boy. With an open front driver’s side door and her purse on the passenger’s seat, he believed she and John had been swept away in the river.ġ2/ 12: A child's shoe was discovered in the spring of 1997 near the area where Sandra Jacobson's vehicle was discovered. 17, 1996, the morning after she was reported missing, the lead investigator thought the case was as good as closed. When Sandra Jacobson’s vehicle was found in Centennial Park along the shores of the Missouri River on Nov. The police file on this case, recently obtained by Forum News Service, reveals an initial investigation that failed to obtain information that could have shed light on Sandra Jacobson’s relationship - and life in general - in the days and weeks before she vanished. If true, it could also resolve questions regarding her emotional and mental state at the time she went missing.

William Connor attempted to piece together the final known days of Sandra and John Jacobson, he kept circling back to the same question: What happened to her journal?įamily members say that Sandra Jacobson kept a daily, detailed journal - one that could hold the answers related to the nature of her relationship with her husband, Alan Jacobson.

#DIAREY OF A MAN WHO VANISHED SERIES#
This is the third and final story in a series on the missing persons case of Sandra and John Jacobson. Also in this episode, learn why an address in rural North Carolina kept popping up in this case. William Connor's quest to find Sandra's journal, which he believed could have shed light on what happened to her and John. In this episode, reporter Trisha Taurinskas dives into Sgt.
