The Indiana Dunes
Disappearance of 1966
On a hot, sunny, summer Saturday, three young women
in bathing suits left all of their belongings a crowded beach and climbed about
a motorboat on Lake Michigan. It was noon on July 2, 1966 at Indiana Dunes
State Park, about an hour around the lake from Chicago.
A couple whose beach blanket was beside the young
women’s watched at the motorboat glided away, then waited all day for them to
return. They didn’t know the girls, but thought it was odd that they would
leave their purses unattended on a day when the park was packed with more than
9,000 holiday weekend sunbathers and swimmers. When the couple left at dusk, they
pointed out the abandoned blanket to a park ranger. They told him that the
young women had left on a boat that was operated by a young man with a headful
of dark, curly hair. The ranger bundled up the belongings and store them away.
A day and a half later, on July 4, Park
Superintendent Bill Svetic took a call from a Chicago man inquiring about his
daughter, Patty Blough, 19. She had not been heard from since leaving home for
Indiana Dunes with two friends Saturday morning. Svetic opened the blanket
bundle that had been left on the beach and found Blough’s wallet, keys and
clothing. He also found clothes and purses belonging to Blough’s friends, Renee
Bruhl, 19, and Ann Miller, 21. Miller’s 1955 Buick was still sitting in the
beach parking lot. Svetic assured Harold Blough that his daughter would turn up
– she’d probably just had a little bit too much fun over the holiday weekend.
Three Women Lost: Patty, Renee and Ann
But Patty didn’t show up. And neither did her
friends. An investigation began belatedly as scuba divers scoured the lake and
searchers on foot and horseback combed the sprawling sands and woods of the
park, which stretches along 45 miles of the Indiana coastline.
But no sign of the young women was ever found. In
fact, they remain missing 48 years later and their fate remains one of the
enduring unsolved mysteries of the region. What happened to the three young
women? No one will probably ever know, but it’s possible that there are still
some clues that might stand out when we trace their movements on the day of
their vanishing – and even in the days that came before.
On the morning of July 2, Ann Miller drover her
four-door Buick and picked up Patty Blough from her family’s home in
Westchester, Illinois around 8:00 a.m. Patty told her mother that they planned
to return home early in the evening since their friend Renee Bruhl was coming
with them and she needed to be back in time to make supper for her husband. Ann
and Patty picked up Renee from her home on West Fulton, on Chicago’s West Side,
and then stopped at a drugstore to pick up some suntan lotion. The women
arrived at the Indiana Dune State Park at approximately 10:00 a.m. Ann parked
in the lot and the women hiked to a spot that was about 100 yards from the Lake
Michigan shoreline.
The nearby couple stated that the girls left their
belongings on the beach at noon and they entered the water together. The
witnesses then saw them speaking to an unidentified man who was operating a 14-
to 16-foot long white boat with a blue interior and outboard motor. They were
unsure of the time when this man approached them. The couple described all this
to the park ranger around dusk, when they noticed that the women’s belongings
were still sitting on the beach. The women had gotten on the boat, they said,
and had headed west with the driver.
The Indiana Dune State Park
Ann, Patty and Renee have never been seen again.
Renee Bruhl left a large beach towel, shorts,
blouse, cigarettes, suntan lotion, 25 cents and her purse, which contained
about $55 in checks, sitting on the beach. The other women also left clothing,
purses and personal items in the sand. Those belongings were collected by the
ranger on the night of their disappearance and stored in the park
superintendent’s office until July 4, when Patty’s father called the park,
searching for his daughter and her friends. The park rangers soon learned that
missing person’s reports had been filed for all three women over the weekend in
Illinois by their families. The rangers searched the park and located Ann’s
Buick in the parking lot. Her car keys had been left with her purse on the
beach, but other items of clothing and personal effects were still inside of
the car. The car was still parked in its original spot from July 2 – no one had
moved it.
The park rangers soon got other law enforcement
agencies involved, including the U.S. Coast Guard. The search was in full swing
by July 5, three days after the girls had vanished. Other witnesses who were in
the park that day came forward with conflicting stories but authorities came to
believe that the first witnesses’ reports were the most reliable – the three
women were seen boarding a boat and they did not return to the beach.
Divers searched Lake Michigan near the shoreline for any sign of the
women
The search for the three women continued around the
clock. It was extended to a six-mile stretch of beach west of the state park,
near Ogden Dunes, later in the week. More witnesses came forward that substantiated
the initial report that the women got into a boat with an unidentified man.
Later accounts claimed that he was in his early twenties with a tanned
complexion and dark, wavy hair. He was wearing a beach jacket at the time. A
beach-goer who was taking home movies on July 2 offered his films to
investigators. The search was narrowed down to two boats after the detectives
watched the footage. One of them was a 16-foot runabout with a three-hulled
design, which was operated by a man who fit the description of the man seen
with the girls. Three women who matched descriptions of the missing girls were
seen aboard the boat in the footage. The second boat was identified as a
26-foot cabin cruiser with three men and three women aboard. The cabin cruiser
was seen at around 3:00 p.m., three hours after the women got aboard the
smaller boat. After reports came in that Ann, Patty and Renee were seen walking
on the beach and eating after this time, investigators came to believe that
they had been dropped off on the beach west of the state park by the driver of
the smaller boat while he drove back to retrieve his two male friends and the
cabin cruiser.
Investigators looked over the belongings left behind, hoping for some
clue
While on the second beach, the girls were
reportedly approached by another unidentified man, who accompanied them to the cabin
cruiser. Witnesses stated that this second boat was equipped with a radio /
telephone antenna, but apparently did not have a name painted on its stern.
This final sighting has never been confirmed, but the authorities did consider
it reliable.
The search went on, but lead after lead went nowhere.
A psychic that was brought into the case claimed to have a vision of a Lake
Michigan cabin where the women’s bodies were buried. An extensive search of the
property believed to be the place seen by the psychic did not uncover any
evidence. However, detectives did point out that the shifting sand dunes may
have buried any possible evidence deeply under the ground.
Investigators began looking into the backgrounds of
the three women in an attempt to discover if their disappearances could have
been voluntary – and it was there that things got ever murkier and stranger.
In Renee Bruhl’s purse, the authorities found a
letter addressed to her husband, Jeff. The couple had been married for just 15
months in July 1966, but in the letter she asked for a divorce. She said that
she felt her husband spent too much time working on cars with his friends and didn’t
seem to have time for her. Her husband, though, told the police that he was not
aware of any problems in their marriage at the time of his wife’s
disappearance. Her family agreed with the statement, telling investigators that
they believed that Renee had written the note in a moment of anger and never
gave it to Jeff because she had changed her mind about the divorce.
But that might not have been all there was to the
story…
All three women were friends, drawn together by
their love of horses. Patty and Ann met while boarding their horses at the same
Illinois stable. Renee was a classmate of Patty’s at Proviso West High School
in Maywood, Illinois and she had completed a one-year course in medical
technology after graduation. The women often rode together and often met at a
tavern in Hodgkins, Illinois after their outings. According to a theory created
by Dick Wylie, a reporter and photographer who chased crime in northwest
Indiana for the Gary Post-Tribune and
the Chicago Sun-Times during the
1950s and ’60s, the events leading to their disappearance began there.
Both Patty and Ann were single and Wylie believes
that fell for married men they met at the tavern and both got pregnant. Later,
statements from some of Ann’s friends claim that she was three months pregnant
in July 1966 and mentioned going to a home for unwed mothers prior to her
disappearance. But did she have plans to end the pregnancy? And what about
Patty? Was she pregnant as well?
Abortion was illegal in Illinois in 1966. According
to Dick Wylie, some Chicago women who found themselves in trouble visited a
house just across the state border in Gary, where a husband-and-wife team,
Helen and Frank Largo, performed backroom abortions. Wylie has linked the
Largos, now dead, to a floating abortion mill that operated on a houseboat
offshore in Lake Michigan. He believes Ann and Patty had arranged abortions on
that boat on July 2, and they were ferried there by Ralph Largo, Jr., a nephew
of Helen and Frank Largo. He was seen at the park that day and matched the
description of the man last seen with the girls on the beach.
Wylie believes that the women got to the larger
boat, but something went wrong with one of the procedures and the other two
were killed so that no witnesses would be left behind. The girls had left their
belongings on the beach because they expected to be back in 90 minutes, Wylie
said. The theory has never been confirmed – the younger Largo died in 2009 –
but it is plausible. However, unless a body turns up, it’s likely to always remain
just a theory.
And it’s not the only one, of course. There have
been many unconfirmed sightings of the three women over the years, but no solid
leads have ever surfaced. The boats that they were allegedly on in July 1966
have never been located and the men operating them have never been solidly
identified. But people have continued to speculate, especially when it comes to
their connection with horses.
Ann, Patty and Renee often rode at the Tri Color
Stables in Palatine, Illinois, which were owned by George Jayne and his
brother, Silas Jayne, who were involved in fraudulent activities, murders and worse
in the mid-1960s. Cheryl Ann Rude, a young woman associated with the horse
market, was killed at the Tri Color Stables in June 1965 by a car bomb that had
been meant for George Jayne. George had asked Cheryl to move his Cadillac from
the stable entrance and the bomb exploded. Some believe that perhaps Patty, Ann
and Renee (or one or any combination of them) may have witnessed the bomb being
planted. However, this does not explain why anyone would have waited an entire
year before silencing them. Or does it? In March 1966, Patty received a facial
injury that she never explained. One of her friends claimed she made an
off-handed remark about it and mentioned trouble with “syndicate people.” But
no proof of any trouble exists.
One of several of the stables that were owned by the Jayne brothers and
mixed up in illegal activities in the Chicago suburbs
There was a connection between the Jaynes and the
missing women, though. Both men’s telephone numbers were found in their
belongings after their disappearance. There is no question that the two men
were deeply involved in crime. George was shot to death in 1970 and Silas was
later convicted of conspiracy in his brother’s murder and sent to prison. He
died in 1987. He is also a suspect in the disappearance and probably murder of
candy heiress Helen Brach (See my blog about this unsolved case by following this link). In 1997, a man named James Blottiaux was charged with planting the 1965
car bomb that killed Cheryl Ann Rude at the Jaynes’ stables, but neither he,
nor the Jaynes, have been positively linked to the disappearances of Ann, Patty
and Renee.
It’s hard not to speculate, though, that any of
them might have been involved in some way. Silas Jayne reportedly told a
sheriff that he had three bodies buried beneath his residence after the 1966
disappearances. Investigators took his claim seriously and planned to search
the property, but the sheriff involved was killed in a farming accident before
the search took place. For whatever reason, it was not pursued after that,
leading some to wonder if the claim was true.
What happened to three pretty young women in July
1966? We’ll likely never know. The case is not unsolvable, but without any
bodies or any solid new leads, it’s unlikely that the truth will ever be known.
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