Pacific Northwest Missing Persons Project
Each year 2,400 people, on average, get lost in the wilderness in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. 90% of those that become lost are found alive, 8 % are located deceased, and the other 2% simply vanish without a trace.
Our host Tanner Hoskins, co-Founder of Pacific Northwest Bigfoot Search and Executive Director at Pacific Northwest Missing Persons Project (PNWMPP) shares the mysterious true stories of adults and children who inexplicably disappeared while recreating in the great outdoors of Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana.
Tanner will share the stories of these missing persons as well as our own expeditions into the area these people were last seen or known to be.
We hope that by telling these stories we can help foster a community driven in bringing answers and closure to these grieving families.
Tanner will also share stories from our organization's own personal expeditions into the wilderness in search of signs of Sasquatch activity and following-up on reports of reported bigfoot activity.
Donate to our cause (Donations are tax-deductable):
https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=7D8GF5RM2V274
or text "PNWMPP" to 44321
PNWMPP is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to the search for and recovery of missing persons whose cases have gone cold in rural and remote locations of Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana.
If you'd like to contact our team, support our organizations mission, or donate directly to our team please visit our website:
www.pnwmpp.org
www.pnwbigfootsearch.com
Fan Mail
I just wanted to say thanks for covering Chet Hanson on your podcast. I worked with Chet at Alaska Airlines during the time of his disappearance and was profoundly affected by it, as were so many others who knew and cared about him. Most of us have moved on from working at the airlines, but a lot of us have remained good friends, and it seems like at least once a year his name will come up and we will talk stories about Chet. I know anything can happen in the woods, but with Chet growing up in the shadow of the mountain in Wilkinson, and having spent so much time on the mountain (I remember mutual friends saying he knew Rainier like the back of his hand) it has just never sat right with me that nothing, including his substantial camera equipment, has ever been found. It will be 30 years next year that Chet disappeared, and I still think about him. I just wanted you to know that I appreciate your work and how important and meaningful it is when people like yourself that shine a light on these mysteries, and help keep the memories of those lost alive.