Jayme approached a community member in Gordon on Jan. 10, the first time she'd been seen since vanishing from her house on Oct. 15, 2018.
When law enforcement officers responded to a mysterious 911 call early that morning, they found Closs missing and her parents murdered, with no signs of a burglary.
The woman walking her dog who Jayme approached, Joanne Nutter, rushed the girl to a nearby home since her own house was close to that of the alleged kidnapper.
“When our neighbor Jeanne came in with Jayme, she said: ‘Get a gun. We don’t know if he’s after us,’” Kristin Kasinskas told Fox News. “So we were armed and ready in case this person showed up.”
Soon after Jayme was ushered inside their home, Patterson was found by police officers driving nearby.
“My kids and I—we went downstairs,” Kasinskas said. “My husband was asked to stand guard at one of the doors on the upper floor. [Patterson] was then arrested not that far away from our house.”
The suspect, 21, was arrested and charged with two counts of first-degree intentional homicide and one count of kidnapping.
Patterson Due in Court
Patterson is scheduled to make his first court appearance in Barron County Circuit Court on Monday, Jan. 14, to be formally charged.Investigators believe that he forced his way into the home of James and Denise Closs in Barron in October before shooting them dead and fleeing with their daughter, who is 13 years old.
Authorities expanded the search for Jayme nationwide shortly after the abduction but turned up few clues and said after she escaped and was located that neither the town of Gordon nor Patterson had been on their radar.
Patterson’s defense attorneys, Charles Glynn and Richard Jones, said they’re concerned about getting their client a fair trial but they’re not sure whether that can happen. They said the case was “a tragic situation from every perspective.”
“It’s been an emotional time for this community and a difficult time for this community. We don’t take that lightly. But we have a job to do in protecting our client,” Jones told The Associated Press.
Officials said at a press conference on Jan. 11 that Patterson didn’t have any known connection to the family and Jayme told FBI agents during questioning that she didn’t know him before the kidnapping, her grandfather, Robert Naiberg, said.
Jayme was reunited with her family on Friday after being medically evaluated and debriefed by agents.
“She’s doing exceptionally well for what she went through,” Naiberg said. “She’s in exceptionally good spirits.”
The charging documents that are set to be revealed on Monday are expected to shed light on what prosecutors believe motivated Patterson to commit the crimes and how he chose the Closs family as a target.
Neighbors Didn’t Have Suspicions
People in the Gordon community said they didn’t suspect that Patterson was holding a teen girl at his home.Patterson wrote that he was planning to join the Marines in the yearbook from his senior year.
Other classmates said he “was just kind of there” and would occasionally make sharp jokes but at other times sleep during class.
“He seemed like he was just one of those guys in school that wanted to fit in but couldn’t because he lacked social skills. … (He) never really made an impact in any way,” said one former classmate, who declined to be identified.
Patterson did join the Marines but dropped out of boot camp and failed in other attempts to start a career, Clinton Rolnik, another former classmate, told the Post.
Between the failed attempts, he was “sitting at home doing nothing, as usual,” since graduating from high school, Rolnik said. He also didn’t have any suspicions of what was allegedly happening at Patterson’s home, adding, “Nobody really knew him like we thought.”
Kasinskas, who teaches middle and high school science, said she taught Patterson when he was 12 or 13 years old and described him as a shy but bright student who had a close circle of friends.
“He didn’t say a whole lot and never really stood out a whole lot to me because he wasn’t super engaging,” Kasinskas told Fox News. “Since then, I didn’t keep up with him. I didn’t even know he lived on this street. … I didn’t know he was my neighbor until Jayme said, ‘Jake took me.’”