Jake Patterson, After Seeing Jayme Closs Board School Bus, Decided to Abduct Her

Zachary Stieber
By Zachary Stieber
January 14, 2019US News
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Jake Patterson, After Seeing Jayme Closs Board School Bus, Decided to Abduct Her
Jake Thomas Patterson, 21, who authorities said admitted abducting 13-year-old Jayme Closs and holding her captive for three months, makes his initial court appearance on Jan 14, 2019, via video feed from the Barron County jail during his bond hearing in Barron, Wis. Judge James Babler set his bail at $5 million. (KSTP-TV via AP, Pool)

The 21-year-old man accused of kidnapping teenager Jayme Closs from her Wisconsin home after slaying her parents initially spotted her boarding a school bus.

That’s what Jake Patterson told police officers during an interrogation after Jayme, 13, was found on Jan. 10, according to a criminal complaint filed in Barron County court on Jan. 14.

According to a timeline established by law enforcement officials, family members, and people who live near Patterson, Jayme escaped from her captor and sought help the community of Gordon, soon running into a woman walking her dog.

The woman, Joanne Nutter, took the teen to a nearby house because her own house was closer to the alleged kidnapper.

Jake Thomas Patterson mugshot
Jake Thomas Patterson, of Gordon, Wis., who has been jailed on kidnapping and homicide charges in the October 2018 killing of a Wisconsin couple and abduction of their teen daughter, Jayme Closs. Jayme was found alive on Jan. 10, 2019, in the town of Gordon. (Barron County Sheriff’s Department via AP)

The neighbors, Kristin and Peter Kasinskas, ushered Nutter and Jayme inside and waited anxiously for the police, with Peter Kasinskas armed and ready to shoot Patterson if he came after the girl.

But the ordeal started months prior, in October 2018, when Patterson worked for two days at a cheese factory that was also the workplace of James and Denise Closs, parents to Jayme.

He told authorities, according to the complaint, which was published by the Green Bay Press-Gazette, that he spotted the girl when he stopped behind a school bus in Barron County and watched her board the vehicle.

“The defendant stated he had no idea who she was nor did he know who lived at the house or how many people lived at the house,” the complaint stated. “The defendant stated, when he saw (Jayme), he knew that was the girl he was going to take.”

Jayme Closs house in Barron Wisconsin
The home where 13-year-old Jayme Closs lived with her parents, James and Denise, in Barron, Wis. The photo was taken on Oct. 17, 2018. (Jerry Holt/Star Tribune via AP)
missing girl jayme closs
Jayme Closs, a 13-year-old Wisconsin girl, went missing on Oct. 15, 2018. She was found on Jan. 10, 2019. (National Center for Missing and Exploited Children)

Patterson disclosed that he drove to the Closs home twice with the intent of kidnapping the teen but one time there were too many cars out front and the other time there were lights on and people walking around.

He finally struck on Oct. 15, barging his way inside and shooting James and Denise Closs dead. He then grabbed Jayme and fled.

Jayme told investigators that she was asleep in her bedroom that night when she heard her dog barking. She saw someone driving up their driveway and alerted her parents. Her father went to the front door to find out who it was. It was Patterson, armed with a firearm. Jayme said she heard a gunshot and knew her father had just been killed the complaint stated.

Denise Closs hid with her daughter in the bathroom and called 911 but soon Patterson broke down the door and shot Denise after the mother put tape over her daughter’s mouth at his instruction.

Jake Patterson's cabin in Wisconsin
The cabin where 13-year-old Jayme Closs was allegedly held by Jake Thomas Patterson, is surrounded by law enforcement vehicles in the town Gordon, Wis., on Jan. 12, 2019. (Aaron Lavinsky/Star Tribune via AP)

Patterson drove her about an hour’s drive away to his cabin in Gordon and told her that “nobody was to know she was there or bad things would happen to her.” When friends or family members visited him in the coming months, he would hide her under his bed and block her in with stacked totes and laundry bins with weights holding them in place.

The complaint stated that Jayme finally escaped on Thursday after Patterson once again made her get under his bed and informed her he was going to be gone five or six hours.

She waited until he left then pushed some bins away, crawled out, put on a pair of his shoes, and fled the home.

Police officers found him a short time later driving around the area and arrested him based on the description conveyed to them by the girl. “I know what this is about. I did it,” he told officers.

Patterson was scheduled to make his first court appearance via video at 3:30 p.m. on Monday to be formally charged with two counts of intentional homicide and one count of kidnapping.