'I became toxic': Teacher whose life was ruined after being named the key suspect in the rape and murder of an 11-year-old boy is finally cleared after 27 YEARS by another man's confession
- Danny Heinrich, 53, of Annandale, this week confessed in federal court that he abducted, sexually assaulted and killed Jacob Wetterling in 1989
- Dan Rassier was questioned about Jacob's abduction in Minnesota several times over the years and was subjected to lie detector tests and hypnosis
- Rassier said the stress from the allegations impacted his health, causing him to miss work and destroying relationships
- Police said that Heinrich's confession 'essentially cleared Dan Rassier as a person of interest in the Jacob Wetterling case'
An elementary school music teacher who has lived under a cloud of suspicion since 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling was kidnapped from central Minnesota in 1989 can breathe easier now that another man has confessed to the boy's abduction and killing.
Dan Rassier was questioned about Jacob's abduction several times over the years and was subjected to lie detector tests and hypnosis.
In 2010, authorities got search warrants to dig up his farm after they said he made suspicious statements to investigators and to Jacob's mother. He was then named a person of interest.
'I became toxic,' Rassier said.
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Dan Rassier was questioned about Jacob's abduction several times over the years and was subjected to lie detector tests and hypnosis. In this September 3 frame grab provided by KSTP-TV, Dan Rassier talks with a reporter at his farm near St. Joseph, Minnesota
Danny Heinrich, 53, of Annandale, pictured left, confessed in federal court this week that he abducted, sexually assaulted and killed Jacob Wetterling, pictured right
In this June 1, 2010 file photo, investigators use a tractor-mounted backhoe to dig for evidence just southeast of the Rassier farm in St. Joseph, Minnesota, near the site where 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling was abducted in 1989
On Tuesday, Danny Heinrich, 53, of Annandale, confessed in federal court that he abducted, sexually assaulted and killed Jacob in St. Joseph, which is 80 miles northwest of Minneapolis.
The confession 'essentially cleared Dan Rassier as a person of interest in the Jacob Wetterling case,' Stearns County Sheriff John Sanner said in an email to The Associated Press.
The case has impacted Rassier's life in ways that he says are hard to explain.
'It's impossible to fix what they broke,' he said.
Rassier, pictured, was at one time named a person of interest in Wetterling's murder
He said the stress in recent years impacted his health, leaving him with headaches and causing him to miss work. As his relationships changed, he had to adapt and do more things on his own.
And while Heinrich's confession cleared Rassier, he's still troubled by the case. He feels for the Wetterlings, and now the truth has him wondering whether he could have done anything to stop the abduction.
'Would there have been anything that could've been done that could've saved him — if I would've done something differently?' he paused. 'The only thing that could've saved him would've been me chasing the car.'
Heinrich said he buried the boy's body in a field in Paynesville, where Jacob's remains were recovered last week.
Rassier, now 60, was just days shy of his 34th birthday and home alone at his family's farm when Jacob was abducted from the road at the end of Rassier's driveway on the night of October 22, 1989.
He said the next day he told authorities about a car that had turned around in his driveway, and later said he might have seen Jacob inside.
Court documents made public Friday show why authorities had Rassier on their list of potential suspects.
Although he was highly detailed in describing his day, he couldn't provide details about the timeframe during Jacob's abduction.
He acted strangely under hypnosis, crying when Jacob's abduction was mentioned.
He also made comments that authorities found unusual - for example, pointing out that there were many places on his property where someone could hide a body.
In 2009, authorities asked Jacob's mother, Patty Wetterling, to talk to Rassier while wearing a recording device. Patty and her husband Jerry are seen above in this August 2009 photo
In this file photo Jacob's parents Jerry & Patty Wetterling stand together where their son was kidnapped
In 2009, authorities asked Jacob's mother, Patty Wetterling, to talk to Rassier while wearing a recording device.
According to the documents, Rassier told Wetterling he didn't know what happened to Jacob and insisted that the driver of the car he saw was the abductor.
He also expressed a fear that if someone buried Jacob on his property, he'd be blamed.
Those statements and others were enough for the search warrant, a judge found.
After his name came out in 2010, parents at one school where he teaches got nervous, and an aide was put in his classroom.
People stopped asking him to play the trumpet at weddings. His private music lessons virtually dried up. He lost some friends. All the while, Rassier, whom students call 'Mr. BeBop,' maintained he had nothing to do with Jacob's abduction.
Jacob Wetterling, 11, was kidnapped from central Minnesota in 1989. Jacob was abducted from the road at the end of Rassier's driveway on the night of October 22, 1989
This November 3, 2015 photo shows the area where 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling was abducted in 1989
Heinrich, pictured right, admitted to killing Jacob, pictured left. Heinrich's confession 'essentially cleared Dan Rassier as a person of interest in the Jacob Wetterling case,' Stearns County Sheriff John Sanner said in an email to The Associated Press
Ann Reischl, a lifelong resident of St. Joseph Township and the town clerk, said she always knew Rassier couldn't have harmed Jacob, but she knows some people wondered about him.
'I just don't think any apology (from law enforcement) is going to be big enough,' she said. 'The continual interrogation, and asking Dan to admit it ... and he kept saying, 'No, I didn't do it.' It's got to be frustrating.'
Rassier said he thought he was helping and because of the experience he no longer trusts law enforcement.
And he says he's trying to look for the silver lining: Because of the scrutiny, he started helping his ailing father more. His dad died last year, two days after authorities announced Heinrich was a person of interest.
'I got to spend more time with my dad because of this happening,' he said. 'You try to look for something good out of it.'
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