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100 Objects #9: Missing Children Milk Carton

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In 1982, a twelve-year-old paperboy, Johnny Gosch, vanished from a quiet Iowa street and sparked an unlikely campaign: the faces of missing children printed on milk cartons by the billions. Roman Mars...

Transcript

EN

Our story begins in 1982.

Newspaper circulation is at an all-time high.

β€œAnd every morning around a million children take to their paper roots to deliver the morning news.”

On September 5, 1982, one of those children was a boy named Johnny Gosh, who slipped out of his house in Westomoyne, Iowa before the sun came up. While his mom and dad were still asleep in their bed. We were awakened by the phone ringing. That's Norring Gosh, Johnny's mother.

It was the neighbor saying they did not receive their newspapers.

This wasn't like Johnny. He'd never missed a delivery.

His dad got up and said, "I'll go help him finish the route. He's probably just running late." So he went up the street and that's where he saw Johnny's wagon sitting.

β€œJohnny's red wagon was sitting at the corner. It was still full of newspapers.”

So he rushed back and told me, Johnny was gone and to call the police. Johnny Gosh was 12 when he disappeared. He had blue eyes and dirty blonde hair with a small gap between his front teeth. And his face would be on the very first milk carton to ever feature a missing child. I have distinct memory of being kid and just staring at the milk carton with this blurry face on it. That's reporter, Annie Brown.

Which is weird because I definitely wasn't alive to see one. The milk carton campaign only lasted a few years in the 80s, but it left an indelible mark on our culture. It introduced a kind of mythology around child safety that lingers to this day. And it changed what exactly Americans are afraid of when we fear for our children.

β€œFrom 99% of visible and BBC studios, this is a history of the United States in a hundred”

objects. I'm Roman Mars. Today, the missing children milk carton. The morning that Johnny disappeared, Nareen said it took 45 minutes for the police to arrive. So she called around to the other boys who delivered papers that morning. A few of them said they saw her son talking to a man in a blue car. But the police were skeptical. The cop looked at me and said, "Well, he's your son ever run away before." And I said,

"Well, no, he's never run away ever nor did he run away today." This was Iowa. This kind of thing wasn't

supposed to happen to kids like Johnny in places like Iowa. We'd never had a crime like this before. This was before Amber Alerts before those text messages that you get when a kid goes missing. There wasn't even a category for missing children. Kids were put in the same group as missing adults. And an adult had to be gone for three days before they were considered missing. So without the police' help, Johnny's parents tried everything they could to find him.

They hired private investigators and coordinated search parties. Meanwhile, as they searched, they also wrote Iowa State legislation that would differentiate missing children from missing adults. I wrote the Johnny Gashlaw at my kitchen table. But after all of this, Norine's son was still gone. And then two years later, in 1984, another little boy disappeared while delivering newspapers.

He lived in a neighborhood not far from Johnny's. Eugene Martin was last seen delivering newspapers between 5.30 and 6. That morning. His paper bag with newspaper still inside was found just outside of Des Moins.

This second paper boy had a relative who worked at a local dairy. The Anderson and Ericsson dairy.

That relative and the dairy's owner came up with an idea to help find these boys. The Anderson Ericsson dairy contacted each family and they wanted to do something helpful in the investigations. And within a few short weeks, thousands of milk cartons were rolled out of trucks and intergrocery stores all over Des Moins. As clerks stalked their shelves, the faces of Johnny Gash and Eugene Martin smiled back.

The campaign started at one local dairy, but over the next few weeks, it spread to other Midwestern towns. And in Illinois dairy saw it and said, "Why don't we try that?" And from there, it went national. Nearly everybody drinks milk. Milk also turns over quickly so we could put a lot of different kids' photos on and pulled children's off that needed to come off.

That's Barbara Huggett.

Michigan when the milk carton campaign took off. Our founder, apparently he'd seen

β€œJohnny Gash and Eugene Martin and the Anderson Ericsson dairy milk cartons, but he felt that the”

program should be nationwide. And they said, "Why did milk carton campaign with alert families in California to look for a child that went missing in Iowa?" The National Campaign brought together local groups looking for missing children. And together, they came up with an initial list of 77 kids from all over the country. We used cases that were believed to be what they termed in those days, dangerous, stranger abductions.

In other words, kids that weren't taken by someone, they knew. Barb's team didn't have computers, so they cut and arranged all the layouts by hand. We designed a layout that was just, you know, rather simple. In black block letters, the word missing was printed across the top of each waxy paper panel. Photos of two children were laid

β€œside-by-side in black and white. Under the photos where their dates of birth, height, weight,”

and where they were last seen, they also printed the pictures on school milk cartons, but only one child could fit on those. The National Child Safety Council reached out to Derry's all over the country, asking if they'd be part of the campaign. Within months, 700 independent Derry's had signed on. Boy, I wish I knew how many cartons had circulated. I imagine it's way into the billions. When you have 700, 750 Derry's printing day in and day out for years,

some sources have estimated that as many as five billion milk cartons were printed with the

faces of missing children. Five billion milk cartons, telling every American family, this could happen to your kid. It's every parents' worst nightmare. As I said, we had not had cases of this going on in our community. Johnny's was the first really big case to hit. Johnny's may have been the first big case to hit, and the first to spark the National Milk carton campaign. But there had been previous kidnappings of other children in other places

that hadn't sparked the same outrage. It's interesting, in Atlanta, there were two young boys who also went missing around the same time in July of 1979. This is a story in Paul Renfrow. And this didn't really initiate the same sort of panic, the same sort of concern that you saw in Iowa with the disappearances of two paper boys. It wasn't just two boys in Atlanta who disappeared. It was a whole slew of them. And it's striking to see just how differently the world responded.

First, a 14-year-old boy named Teddy Smith went missing. Four days later, 13-year-old Alfred Evans

disappears. A few months after that, another 14-year-old vanishes on the way to the bank for his mom, then a nine-year-old running an errand for a neighbor. The National Media was so hard to leak quiet. There was no innovative campaign to find them, but it happened over and over again. In fact, over the course of two years, 29 kids and young people disappeared in Atlanta. One clear difference was that all of these children were black.

All of these youths were African-American. And the discourse around it, there was no real kind of cry from the public apart from the victim's families.

β€œAnd why didn't the Atlanta kidnap things lead to a similar campaign?”

I think it has to do with our understanding of childhood and childhood innocence. I think those

things are always racialized in very particular ways. And so the descriptors of innocence

that were so readily attached to Johnny Gosh and Eugene Wade Martin. In Iowa and other missing or slain white kids, those descriptors were not applied to the youngsters who were kidnapped and killed in Atlanta. Oftentimes they were described as street-wise, as street hustlers. And so in a way, some of the discourse surrounding their disappearances and deaths, a serve to legitimate their their their disappearances and deaths. Many of the children kidnapped in Atlanta were found dead

in the weeks and months after they disappeared. But some remained missing. And yet none of them appeared in the National Child Safety Council's milk carton campaign. And even for the kids who did end up on milk cartons, the campaign was largely unsuccessful. Of the 200 kids who were featured in the National Child Safety Council's campaign, only two were ever found alive. Barbara still remembers the day they got the call. That a boy named Bobby Smith Jr. was found.

The day they called and said that he had been found, we got on the loudspeake...

intercom, and let everyone know. And it was just a sense of allation, and you wanted to let

β€œeveryone in the building that had mailed it, boxed it, shipped it, you know, you just wanted to tell”

everyone who had touched it, that that was worthwhile. You could hear the cheer throughout the whole building. Yeah, we found a child, it was wonderful, you know. But Bobby Smith wasn't found because of the milk carton. Bobby was found by coincidence. His kidnappers car had been involved in an accident, and when the police came looking for the owner of the car, they found Bobby. But most of the kids featured in the National Campaign and in the smaller local ones,

were never found. Unfortunately, the leads from the milk cartons did not reveal where Johnny's

location was. That's Noreen Gosh again. Her son Johnny was never found, but she and Barbara will get our both adamant that the campaign had a positive impact. What it did was promote more awareness, so that people were looking if they saw a child that looked like they were in distress. Maybe you questioned whether or not those were the parents. Mostly, the milk cartons just got people thinking about kidnapping. I have talked to a quite a number of adults, and they could

β€œremember their mom putting the milk carton on the kitchen table and saying, "Now, we're going to”

go over the rules again," and they would use the example of the boys on the milk carton. And then make the correlation between that child and their child's life. In other words, the faces

on the milk cartons scared the hell out of everyone. Which ultimately led to the campaign's downfall.

Almost as quickly as they began, the milk carton campaigns started to wind down. Derries began to pull the missing kids' pictures from their side panels. One reason of course with the cartons is that the industry shifted to plastic. But Derries also started to get tired of the depressing message. They took it away because there were people that were complaining that they thought it might scare children at the breakfast table. The famous pediatrician, Dr. Benjamin Spock, condemned

β€œthe milk carton campaign. It was traumatizing, he said. Kids shouldn't have to face that over”

their lucky charms. They see these missing kids kind of staring at them. That milk carton almost demands them to have that conversation. What to do if you see a stranger or a stranger accosts you, that's a story in Paul Renfrogan. Paul wrote a book about the milk carton kids and the larger panic gripping society at the time. Stranger Danger. Paul studies the way child safety was talked about at this time. In the news on the radio, by politicians. Folks are kicking around

these numbers that are just astronomical. Folks are saying there are 1.8 million missing

children in the United States and missing becomes very closely attached to abducted by strangers. But that just wasn't true. Every year, around 350,000 kids are reported missing to the authorities. That's around 1,000 every day. But the most recent report from the FBI found that the number of kids who are actually taken by strangers is only 0.1% of that. The major cases that kind of spur national anxiety about this sort of thing are presumed to be stranger kidnappings. But the overwhelming

majority of kidnappings are perpetrated by parents or someone close to the child. This mirrors a larger societal myth that those who are more likely to perpetrate sexual assaults are strangers or those who don't know the victim. And that's kind of a way to obscure or overlook the real source of that danger. It's not the stranger that we've constructed in our minds of this kind of evil individual who is lurking in the shadows. But, you know, it's someone who's face we know.

The National Child Safety Council's campaign was built on this misconception, and they were criticized for featuring only kids who had been abducted by strangers. But smaller, grassroots campaigns cropped up across the country, ones that didn't have those rules. It was one of these other remote-carned campaigns that ended up featuring the face of a missing girl named Bonnie Bullock. I wasn't kidnapped by strangers, I was kidnapped by

people that loved me, and Bonnie was found after she saw her own face on the milk carton. [MUSIC]

In 1995, a few years after the milk carton campaign had ended, CBS aired a br...

mage for TV movie called "The Face on the Milk Parton."

Hi guys, it's one search for you. Hey guys, I guess we'll move next here. In it, there's a classic scene. Jamie Johnson, a typical teenager living a comfortable life with her loving parents, is in the cafeteria one day at school. A friend spills some milk on her lap, and starts to comment on the milk carton.

β€œHow is anyone supposed to recognize a three-year-old kidnap 13 years ago?”

Only then does Jamie glance down at the picture of the three-year-old girl, and she recognizes her own face.

This movie played over and over again throughout my childhood, and I think it was this story that

actually introduced me to the milk carton kids, and to the idea that it was possible that you could be kidnapped and not even know it. It was fiction of course, but something very similar had already happened to a very real little girl named Bonnie Bullock. I want to say I was gone from, I think I was a little after three, and I was found when I was almost seven. Bonnie had been kidnapped not by a stranger, but by her mother and her stepfather.

And because of that, Bonnie's dad didn't know if her story would qualify to get on a milk carton. Someone introduced him to this campaign, and he said, "Well, it's her mom that has her,

β€œyou know, and they're like, "Well, do you know where she is?" And he goes, "No." And he's like, "Is she coming back?”

Have you talked to her? Have anything?" He's like, "No, I know nothing." And he goes, "Well, then that's considered missing." A local campaign decided to start printing Bonnie's picture. Meanwhile, three-year-old Bonnie has no idea she's been kidnapped. But her childhood was pretty strange. I don't know where we started on the run. I mean, I know we went to places like Pennsylvania, we went to San Antonio, we were gone for a while in a place called Saipan.

They spend a year in Saipan. This small island near Guam. Yeah, we lived in the woods like in a shack. Next was Hawaii, but they were still lying pretty low. We stayed inside all the time in Hawaii. I recall maybe one or two times being outside.

Finally, they end up in Colorado. And her mom and stepdad start to relax a bit.

The next door neighbors had a bunch of kids, and Bonnie would play over there all the time. We would play Barbies, and I had my little, you know, Barbies case, and I would bring that over. Aside from going to her neighbors, Bonnie was hardly ever allowed to leave the house, but on an unusual occasion when Bonnie was seven years old, her stepdad took her to the supermarket. They needed milk. I just remember like looking and seeing how many cartons of milk there were.

Nowadays, it's like whatever brand it is would be facing you, whereas at that time, it seemed like all the pictures were facing you. He grabbed the milk. He's like hating who that is. Hey, you're famous, you know? He's like, look, look, you're here, and I was like, oh, and I saw myself, and I was like, oh, is that me? And he's like, oh, she's... Bonnie's stepdad bought the milk carton with her face on it. And when they finished it,

he asked her a question, "Do you want it? You want to keep it?" And so I remember cutting it out,

β€œand being like, whoa, and staring at the picture, and I think my hair was like in a little pony tail on the side,”

and I was wearing this little dress. He's like, now you gotta keep it in, you know, a safe place. And I must have tossed it in my Barbie case. At this moment, Bonnie didn't know that anything was wrong. I know I didn't read them because I would have realized that I was missing because on the picture, it actually said, "Missing child," and then my name and the date. At seven years old, she couldn't read. Bonnie doesn't remember ever going to a real school.

He was so confident in himself that he could show me that because nothing's going to happen with it. But one of the next times, Bonnie was at the neighbor's house. She left her Barbie case there. With the picture, she cut out of her own face on the milk carton. And I remember going back over there, a couple of days later, and I was like, oh, I left my Barbie's, can I get my Barbie's? And the mom was there. And I remember her being like, oh, Bonnie, we found this beautiful picture of you,

and she was like, is this you? And I was like, yeah, yeah, it's me up there. And she was like, oh, is your name, Bonnie Bullock? And I go, no, no, no, my name is Bonnie Smith. And she's like, oh, she's like, I don't have any pictures of you. She goes, do you care if I keep it? And I was like, oh, I don't,

I don't know if you're, you're allowed to keep it.

And I just keep it for a little bit on the refrigerator. And I was like, yeah, I was like, okay. Not long after everything changed. Remember, there are a lot of police showing up, a lot of police showing up. Police swarmed Bonnie's home. She was with the way and returned to her father,

but the reunion wasn't easy at first. I remember being scared because I didn't know my dad.

And I only wanted to do with people with her. Kind of sucked, you know. After returning to her dad, Bonnie had a pretty normal life. She started school, went on to college, and eventually became a nurse. She's one of the milk carton campaigns, a few success stories.

β€œI believe that I am who I am because I was on a milk carton and I, I was found and, um,”

you know, I had opportunities with my dad growing up that I might not have had with my mom. I was able to live a great life and I'm grateful for it.

Her story, while the stuff of a literal maid for TV movie, is actually much more representative

than a lot of the missing child cases that made headlines. It just underscores the reality of the problem of kidnapping, right? Does this a story in Paul Renfro again? It is a problem that is primarily one of the family and of acquaintances. It really is not one that's focused on strangers, even though that is the phenomenon that is most feared and the one that drove this panic in in the 80s and 90s. Unfortunately, stranger danger didn't stop driving panic in the 80s and 90s.

β€œThough the fear itself has kind of mutated.”

New tonight, a popular DC piece of joint is at the center of a social media firestorm accused

of being a human trafficking hotspot using children for satanic rituals and worse. It begins on Twitter, actually. Just weeks before the 2016 election, a theory starts to take Twitter and read it by storm. Under the hashtag pizza gate, the vandals are spreading an imaginary story that the popular Northwest DC pizza shop is the center of a child sex slavery. This notion that the Democratic Party and specifically

folks in the orbit of Hillary Clinton were abducting and abusing children and they were doing all of this in a pizza parlor. Now, it's not just strangers taking your kids, it's political elites. Reddit slues believed that Clinton and her campaign manager, John Podesta, were using underground tunnels to access the basement of a pizza place called comet ping pong. The conspiracy theory may sound absurd, but it has won over lots of believers who keep turning

up at the restaurant. The story gets picked up by Alex Jones at Info Wars and the F-Octimes. Protesters show up outside the pizza place. Death threats start pouring in. The owner and staff at comet ping pong have been getting plenty of those threats and now it is spreading to other nearby businesses. And it really escalated a few weeks later. It spurred an individual to drive up from North Carolina to the comet ping pong parlor and

tried to liberate the children who were ostensibly being enslaved and held hostage in the basement of the comet ping pong. And of course, he arrived armed. He was ready to die for this cause. He fired several rounds, and thankfully didn't strike anybody, but soon learned that there is no basement to the comet ping pong. And of course,

β€œthere were no kids in the non-existent basement. I think pizza gate and the shooting incident”

really encapsulates, I think a lot of the fears and anxieties that led to the development of the milk carcant campaign, the child's safety campaign around it, a lot of the legislation that grew out of that, movement, and these broader fears of human trafficking and sex trafficking, and the supposedly debauchers acts of certain political elites in the United States. But unfortunately, as we all know, political elites have indeed been committing debauchers acts.

I mean, this all gets complicated by the fact that as we start learning more about the Jeffrey Epstein's scandal, it kind of confirms the sense of a cabal of these elites of a child's sex abuse ring. Right, I think so in many ways, yes, it does confirm the existence of a cabal that is

Invested in abusing young people.

to weaponize those files in the service of a political project and specifically a partisan project.

And I think this is true on either side of the political aisle. So instead of focusing on victims or focusing on the eradication of abuse and exploitation, it's being used to score petty partisan points.

β€œHere's the thing. The Epstein files document real abuse that deserves to be taken seriously.”

The perpetrators should be held accountable. But that's not the only reason the story has consumed the American imagination in the way that it has. It's also that the files seem to confirm our stickiest conspiracy theories and our worst fears. But they paint a picture that is very

different than what actually threatens most American children, which is something much more mundane.

There's a tension clearly between the Epstein files and everything they seem to verify. And the reality that children are far more likely to be exploited by people they know, by family members. The Epstein files and the discourse surrounding them I think will only sort of exacerbate the misunderstanding and exacerbate the confusion around the sorts of matters and they will not contribute or will deter from the actual sort of naming of child sexual abuse and a deeper

understanding of child sexual abuse. Mr. Speaker, domestic child trafficking is a serious problem

sadly in the United States. In the last few decades, one statistic about child sex trafficking

has taken hold. Around 300,000 American youth are at risk of sexual commercial exploitation and trafficking each year. It's in the neighborhood of 300,000 children domestically that are being trafficked every day. That 300,000 American children are at risk of being trafficked for sex. Studies suggest that over 290,000 youth are over 300,000 American children are at risk. Their estimates between 100,000 to 300,000 girls. The statistic is cited by lawmakers more than

300 by celebrities by non-profits. For the more the FBI is estimated that over 300,000 American children are at risk of sexual exploitation and trafficking annually. And it's stuck with the public. A survey done by the University of Miami political scientist found that over half of the country believes that the number of kids who are trafficked each year is 300,000 or more. The more we talk about it, the more we can change it and stop it. Thank you so much for your

information and for educating me about this too. I appreciate it. But this number is incredibly wrong. It comes from a study back in 2001. A study that wasn't

β€œcalculating the number of victims of child sex trafficking. But how many kids might be at risk?”

And that meant kids in foster homes or public housing. Kids who lived near borders or had access to a car. Child sex trafficking is a real problem. Just not at this scale. The nature of these crimes is that they're under-reported, but the statistics we do have tell a very different story. In 2021, FBI agents working on child sex trafficking cases identified just over 500 victims who are under age. Not 300,000, but 500.

And some data suggests that for nearly half of all cases, the child is trafficked, not by a stranger, but by someone close to them. In the United States, it most clearly is a serious grave problem. But it's one that we would rather distort through these larger, more fantastical

β€œnarratives. I think it's far more comforting to say. It's nefarious strangers rather than a”

larger kind of structural problem. I guess my question is like, why do you think that we gravitate towards these fantastical narratives of what is actually dangerous for children? What feels good about that? Right. It's comforting to refuse to interrogate the actual relationships that do spawn this sort of abuse and it's easier to localize that threat within forces that we already find dangerous

Or we already find suspicious.

who are holding children hostage in a pizza parlor or individuals who are flying all over the world,

β€œattaching children and taking them to an island, then to really question oneself and the sorts of”

commitments they have to the family to these religious institutions or political and social institutions that they hold dear. Nothing delivered this strange comfort in a more lasting way than the milk

carton. For a few short years, five billion milk cartons sat in every kitchen in America,

telling the same story that the threat is out there. After the milk carton campaign ended, pictures of missing children started showing up on all kinds of other things. Pizza boxes, plastic grocery bags, utility bills. Actually, the utility bill campaign went on for much

longer than the milk cartons, but most of us haven't even heard of it. It just didn't stick.

There was something different about seeing a face on the side of a milk carton.

β€œThere is a sense of familial unity that I think milk helps to author this sense of maternal”

nurturance and also being this kind of item around which people gather around the breakfast table, so putting missing kids faces on that item was quite deliberate and perhaps the reason why that lives on. A history of the United States and a hundred objects is a production of 99% of visible and BBC studios. It's hosted and curated by me, Roman Morris. Our series producers are Priscilla, Alibi, Brenna, Daldor, and Ellie Lightfoot. Our associate producer is Isaac Fisher.

This series was edited by Annie Brown and Courtney Harrell, mixing by Charlie Brandon King, fact checking by Amy Bracken. Our theme song is by Swan Real. From 99% of visible our executive producer is Kathy too. From BBC studios our executive producers are Annie Brown and Courtney Harrell. Our production coordinator is Shan Pelle. And the production manager is Mabel Finnigan Wright, art work by Stefan Lawrence. 99% of visible is part of the

series XM podcast family, headquartered in beautiful, uptown, Oakland, California. And BBC studios is headquartered in beautiful, white city, West London.

β€œIf you want to get in touch or have an object for us to consider email us at 100 objects at”

99PI.org. [BLANK_AUDIO]

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