Sunday, November 30, 2014

Leanna "Beaner" Warner




Chisholm, Minnesota is a small city of roughly 5,000 people about an hour and a half northwest of Duluth. It was founded as a mining town and the area is called "meebeega" by the Chippewa tribe, which translates as "rough earth." I believe this also translates to the people who live in this tough little Iron Range community. It is also a town where people don't believe bad things can happen.

Leanna Warner, who was nicknamed Beaner by her grandfather, was five years old on June 14, 2003, when she arrived barefoot at her friend's house around the corner. The family had gone to Wal-Mart, so she headed back the way she came. She was last seen by two different neighbors between 5:00 and 5:15 that evening. She was reported missing by her parents, Chris and Kaelin Warner, at around 9pm after doing their own search.

There is very little to go on in this case. Initially, the police believed she had wandered off, and there was not enough information to issue an Amber Alert. (There has to be a known abduction to issue an Amber Alert.)

Bloodhounds used in the search tracked Leanna's scent to Longyear Lake, which is just two blocks away from Warner's home.  Her footprints were also found there, but it wasn't until October of 2003 that the police pumped some water out of the lake to check for evidence. They had to stop pumping because the lake was freezing over and never checked the lake again.

Leanna's parents did not do lie detector tests and are not considered suspects in this case. Although there was a history of domestic violence, this was many years before Leanne's disappearance and there were no recent issues or any plausible reason why either parent would want to harm Leanna.

Leanna was wearing a blue denim jumper, no shoes and a red earring in one ear at the time of her disappearance. She has brown hair and brown eyes. If she was abducted by a stranger, it is an extremely rare event. Of the 800,000 children reported missing every year, only 115 are abducted by strangers or acquaintances who plan to keep them long term. This does remain a possibility, especially since there was a festival that day that brought in a thousand or so strangers into the community. However, many people were interviewed with no clues.

Leanna Warmer, age progression to 14
Leanna Warner was born January 21, 1998 and disappeared on June 14, 2003 from Chisholm, MN. She has pierced ears. There is a $10,000 reward for any information leading to her safe recovery or successful prosecution of her abductor.




12 comments:

  1. The very fact that she was bare foot and that her tracks lead to the lake indicate to me that it was a 411 abduction that David Paulides deals with. They are often associated with water, bare feet, little girls, corn fields and they disappear as if taken up into the air. Again we are talking about alien or shadow government military abductions of the worse kind. They do not necessarily lead to Big Foot but might lead to Dogman except that there were no tracks apparently. Again in the 411 cases the shoes are left behind, the child is taken barefoot. If these children are ever found they are found miles away with no memory of what happened. They are found in places that they could not normally get to and high elevations.

    I am sure you have thought about the 411 cases by now.

    This is so sad to see children disappear like this.

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  2. I knew LeeAnna. My grandmother babysat her and I used to walk her down the road to the park. I remember the last time I ever saw her - about two weeks before she vanished, just before I left for summer camp. I was 12. I remember her asking me if God could see us all the time, even if our parents couldn't. I remember telling her God always knew where she was and always watched over her and loved her. To this day, I replay that conversation in my head and wonder if she knew, if someone had told her they were going to take her away from her parents. I'm a mother myself now, and I can't imagine one of my boys just vanishing. LeeAnna is 20 this year, if she is still out there as I believe she is. I search the internet every year around this time, looking to see if there are any updates - I don't live anywhere near the Iron Range these days. That's how I found your blog - I was looking for an update. Someday, I hope to see her face, reunited with Kaelin and Chris. So far, no luck.

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  3. What gets me is why would any parent wait 4 hours to call police? I lost my 4 yo granddaughter who was playing in the park right across the street and I panicked after only 5 minutes of not finding her. We had the neighborhood looking right away and found her (thankfully) she had wondered off. But who does a search on their own for 4 whole hours before alerting authorities? 5 Years old is way to young to be letting her go anywhere alone. They didn't even call the parents of where she was going to play to see if they were home and to watch for her? Why didn't the bloodhounds detect her scent on the path to the friends house if she was barefoot should have been strong scent, but only detected it at the lake from a different day? The parents have some explaining to do in my opinion.

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    Replies
    1. Chris and Kaelin weren't home. They had sent Leanna to play at a friend's house, and went to Walmart. They aren't even suspects because Walmart is a pretty dang good alibi. And they didn't have cell phones like that; some people didn't even have house phones, if they were poor. The bloodhounds did detect her scent, and that's how they found out she was down at the water. It wasn't just a different day. It had rained a few days before, and the lake was overrun. If ya ask me, it sounds like that baby got rushed away in the lake.

      and, originally, they did look at her parents. That's the really sad part, cause anyone that lived in Chisholm back then could tell you... The Warner adults had their problems, but they loved that child more than anything.

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  4. The parents did take a polygraph test and they passed with flying colors. Just wanted to let you know that part of your article was mistaken. I hope the family eventually gets closer, I can only imagine the hell they have gone through not knowing.

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  5. The parents did take a polygraph test and they passed with flying colors. Just wanted to let you know that part of your article was mistaken. I hope the family eventually gets closer, I can only imagine the hell they have gone through not knowing.

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  6. The parents did take a polygraph test and they passed with flying colors. Just wanted to let you know that part of your article was mistaken. I hope the family eventually gets closer, I can only imagine the hell they have gone through not knowing.

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  7. The parents did take a polygraph test and they passed with flying colors. Just wanted to let you know that part of your article was mistaken. I hope the family eventually gets closer, I can only imagine the hell they have gone through not knowing.

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  8. The parents did take a polygraph test and they passed with flying colors. Just wanted to let you know that part of your article was mistaken. I hope the family eventually gets closer, I can only imagine the hell they have gone through not knowing.

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  9. The parents did take a polygraph test and they passed with flying colors. Just wanted to let you know that part of your article was mistaken. I hope the family eventually gets closer, I can only imagine the hell they have gone through not knowing.

    ReplyDelete
  10. The parents did take a polygraph test and they passed with flying colors. Just wanted to let you know that part of your article was mistaken. I hope the family eventually gets closer, I can only imagine the hell they have gone through not knowing.

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  11. It's difficult to see parenting choices and styles from different (nearby) cultures, keep in mind the year and the fact that they had an extensive search party with local residents... I'm sure that is something that eats at her parents all the time. It's hard to imagine how you may react in a certain situation under almost unimaginable circumstances. We have all made poor parenting choices, I'm sure you're great at pointing out all the great ones to distract from any err. Parents aren't perfect and we should embrace it as a learning opportunity.

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