“An Investigation of the Missing411 Conspiracy” by Kyle Polich on Skeptical Inquirer “Local Skeptical Outreach & Activism: Monterey County SkeptiCamp” by Susan Gerbic, February 3, 2017, on Skeptical Inquirer “Adventures in SkeptiCamp” by Susan Gerbic, from Skeptical Briefs Volume 25.3, June 16, 2016, on the Skeptical Inquirer The Talk Page for David Paulides’ Wikipedia entry “David Paulides taking break after death of his son” Event Announcement on the Missing 411 subreddit “David Paulides Misrepresentation” from the Missing 411 subreddit discussion thread “The body of Missing 411 "victim" Tatum Morell has been found” from the Missing 411 subreddit “Missing 411- David Paulides Presents Five Missing Cases from the Beartooth Mountains of Montana.” from the CanAm Missing Project YouTube channel “New research: I attempted to solve these twelve Missing 411 cases and this is what I found – The Unexplained Missing Farmers Phenomenon” from the Unresolved Mysteries subreddit “Stickied: a list of all Missing 411 deconstructions” from the Missing 411 Discussions on Reddit “Why That 'Dingo's Got My Baby' Line Isn't Funny” from TIME magazine “The Strange 1932 Willie Dave Piatote Case (And Some Other Strange Huckleberry Cases That Are Strange)” from the Missing 411 subredditĪrticle on Wesley Piatote, error with the name “Willie Dave Piatote” who was Wesley’s father, from The Bellingham Herald, August 8, 1932 “UO Today with Beth Piatote” from the Oregon Humanities Center on YouTubeĪrticle on Bobby Panknin, “Lost on Outings – Missing Tots are Hunted” from the Spokane Chronicle, August 5, 1963Īrticle on Carrie Noble, “Hope Wanes for Missing Idaho Girl” from The Spokesman-Review, August 6, 1963Īrticle on Bobby Panknin, “Searchers Fail to Locate Boy” from The Spokesman-Review, August 8, 1963Īrticle on Bobby Panknin, “Faint Hope Seen for Missing Boy” from The Spokane Chronicle, August 12, 1963Īrticle on Bobby Panknin, “Kidnapping Possibility is Pondered” from The Spokesman-Review, August 13, 1963 case at THE RESOURCE CENTER FOR COLD CASE MISSING CHILDREN’S CASES “Missing 411: What You Aren't Being Told | David Paulides | Ep 110” from the Rick & Bubba Show podcast on their YouTube channel Missing 411: The UFO Connection | Official Trailer on YouTube Three People Vanished on the same day, miles apart and are never found” from the CanAm Missing project on YouTube HBO DOCUMENTARY SERIES: BLACK AND MISSING “Family holds out hope in search for missing hunter” from KOB 4 TV on YouTubeĬommunity United Effort also known as (CUE) Center for Missing Persons – McMurdo FAST FIND 220 Personal Locator Beacon (PLB) on Amazon National Parks Are The Most Dangerous?” from Outforia magazine online “These National Parks Are the Nation’s Most Dangerous” from Sunset magazine online As far as any alarming pattern to these cases is concerned, if strange yet commonplace coincidences do occur, how many coincidences are too many? There are plenty of errors and omissions from all parties, but what are the causes and intentions behind them? With hundreds, perhaps thousands of incidents, it's understandable when a news outlet rushing to report under a deadline makes mistakes, but can the same leeway be given to Paulides? Are they honest mistakes or the handy claim that details are "cherry-picked," overlooked, or embellished to prop up a narrative and sell content? Will later discoveries change the investigations, are we being told everything, and what are the motivations of those doing the telling or omitting? Are blunders in the reporting, whatever the intent, proof that nothing extraordinary is going on? As we conclude the episode with an overall skeptical analysis and finish with our personal assessments, it's clear that what is deemed either a mundane tragedy or a mysterious phenomenon is in the eye of the beholder. Discrepancies raise questions when ascertaining the objective facts and judging if the evidence is remarkable. We then take a closer look at a few more puzzling cases and, with a critical eye, examine the data presented by David Paulides and the CanAm Project vs. In Part Two of our series on the Missing 411 phenomenon, we'll first examine a study conducted to determine which National Parks are the most dangerous in the United States.
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