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16 Years After Student Goes Missing, Family Receives Call From North Korea

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It almost brought her to a halt when she heard who was on the other end of the line. Her eyes were large as she silently gestured for her husband to join her.

Apparently, the man explained that David, her son, was in North Korea. David hadn’t been seen for seven years… That couldn’t be right.

Exploring Life

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Brigham Young University student David Sneddon was a young man who enjoyed life and all the possibilities it presented. David was an American who enjoyed learning about the various cultures in the world. In 2004 he finally took the plunge and booked a trip to China.

He had explored South Korea a few years prior, so he felt comfortable exploring the rest of Asia. But he was in no way ready for what happened to him there.

Unsolved Mystery

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“His course work was done, so he said he was going to take a look around some touristy spots in southeast China before he came back,” Roy, David’s father, explained to The Washington Post.

However, no one, not even the top government officials, was able to solve the mystery surrounding David’s journey.

It Was A Sign

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David shared during email correspondence with his mother that he was “pumped to do some hard-core traveling.” Unfortunately, he was only able to set aside three weeks for the trip, so he did his best to squeeze in everything he wanted to do,

“If you never hear from me again, look for my body in the western Yunnan Province of China or the Yellow Mountains of Anhui. Just kidding. No, I’m really so excited,” he continued in his email. This pleasant email would ultimately turn out to be more of a foreshadowing of disaster.

The Next Adventure

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David traveled to Yangshuo on Thursday, August 5, but he wasn’t by himself. His roommate George Bailey joined him for a couple of days to enjoy the beautiful scenery the town next to Li River had to offer.

The two men planned to go their separate ways after spending a few days hiking and biking in paradise. George was meeting up with more friends while David traveled west to Yunnan.

The Last Goodbye

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David woke up early that following Monday to catch the bus as George tiredly watched his roommate rush through the door. George yelled his goodbyes as his friend moved on to the next adventure.

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“See you in Provo,” David yelled as he rushed through the door. It was David’s last words to George, but George didn’t realize it at the time.

No Contact

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Out of seemingly nowhere, David’s family stopped receiving emails, however, they initially tried to shrug it off. It was possible that David was having too much fun in China and couldn’t find the time to fill them in. Or perhaps the signal was just bad in the Chinese mountains?

He didn’t show up for a scheduled meeting with his older brother Michael in Seoul, which raised suspicions.

Into Thin Air

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A beautiful and scenic trail near the Burmese border called Leaping Tiger Gorge was the destination of David’s hike. Then he disappeared without a trace. There was no trace of him as if he had vanished into thin air.

Officials from China broke the news to his parents, who were in disbelief, but something didn’t seem right.

Disbelief

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In accordance with the Chinese government’s information, Kathleen and Roy Sneddon was told that David had died following a fall. Even worse, there was no way to recover his body.

Nevertheless, the Sneddons just couldn’t believe the officials’ account for some strange reason. The situation didn’t seem right. There was more to David’s story than they could ever have imagined.

Not Adding Up

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“There’s no evidence of that—zero,” Kathleen shared. It would make him “the only American missing in China since World War II whose body has not been found and whose location is unknown.”

Moreover, David’s parents, who had 10 children, knew their son was a skilled hiker. On an easy tourist trail, surely he wouldn’t have made such an idiotic mistake?

Searching

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Roy was determined to find out what had really happened to David, so he enlisted the help of two of his other children, Michael and James. Together, the boys traveled to Yunnan to try and find their missing brother.

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A month after David had disappeared, they reached the Leaping Tiger Gorge, where they were met with a suspicious sight.

Putting On A Show

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“It was ridiculous,” Michael Sneddon said. When they reached the area, the hiking trail was crawling with policemen and their K-9 units, putting on a desperate show for the benefit of the two brothers.

“We just laughed and said thanks,” Michael added. But, while David was nowhere to be found, the brothers did come across a valuable piece of the puzzle.

Clues

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At the Leaping Tiger Gorge, a tour guide told the siblings that he’d known David personally. In fact, he’d walked with him along the entire trail! This story was then corroborated by a hostel owner at the end of the hike.

Apparently, David had stayed there. The clues were all pointing to the fact that David had walked the trail successfully, but where was he now?

Determined

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The Sneddon family kept searching for something… anything… that would indicate that David was alive. They showed the locals pictures of him, and wherever they went, they found more clues that David had been there.

A cafe owner in Shangri-La said he’d met him and could even describe him, but that’s where the trail suddenly grew cold.

Witnesses

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All the witnesses who told David’s parents about having seen their son, including the mentioned cafe owner and a Tibetan hiker, later said to the Chinese police that they couldn’t be sure about what they said.

In other words, they refused to appear as formal witnesses in front of Chinese law enforcement. But why could that be?

Silence

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“We were, I suppose, naive,” Roy told the media. “We had all these sightings we felt good about and went to Shangri-La … we said, hey, we have all this information they haven’t shared with the police.”

“It became evident they weren’t going to do anything. The Korean cafe was about 100 meters from a police station, all they had to do was walk down the street, and they didn’t do it for six months. The Chinese police are not incompetent.” But that’s not all.

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Terrified

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Kathleen, David’s mother, went even further. She said that those witnesses were “terrified” of what might happen to them if they spoke about the issue.

It became clear that David’s parents couldn’t count on the Chinese government to help them find their son. However, they weren’t willing to give up. But what could they do now?

Helpless

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Roy got the U.S. State Department involved. But, as far as the department was concerned, David had met his end in the Gorge.

They believed what the Chinese government told them. Roy and Kathleen’s hands were tied. It was only in 2011 — seven years after David’s disappearance — that they got a bizarre call.

A Theory

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The man on the end of the line was Richard Craft, an expert on North Korea and a formidable attorney. He told Kathleen that all the details about David’s disappearance, in his experience,  pointed to North Korea.

He’d been studying the pattern of typical North Korean government kidnappings, and all the clues fit. Kathleen couldn’t believe what she was hearing.

It Wasn’t The First Time

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The North Korean government has a history of kidnapping foreign nationals who venture into areas near its borders. The Japanese government is particularly concerned with this.

It has been happening since the 70s. Most of the people abducted by the North Korean government are yet to be found. Nothing is known about their whereabouts or even about whether they’re dead or alive.

17 Victims

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Many Japanese citizens disappeared during the 1970s and 1980s, and the Government of Japan has so far identified 17 Japanese citizens as victims of kidnapping.

Five of them returned home in 2002, but nothing has been heard from any other abductee. Among the missing Japanese citizens is Megumi Takuya, a 13-year-old girl who disappeared in 1977 and was allegedly enslaved as a language teacher for a high-ranking North Korean official.

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Enslaved

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Apparently, most of these Japanese citizens were kidnapped and forced to teach North Korean officials about the Japanese language and culture or had their identities stolen so agents could masquerade as Japanese for espionage aimed mainly at South Korea.

In September 2002, North Korea admitted that it had abducted Japanese citizens and apologized while promising to prevent any further recurrences. However, there are reasons to believe that this promise wasn’t kept.

Secrecy

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After admitting to the abduction of 13 Japanese nationals, North Korea allowed five to return home. It said eight others had passed away and denied that any other missing Japanese citizens had entered its territory.

The North Korean government promised to conduct an investigation but never announced the results.

Complete Silence

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According to Japan, North Korea hasn’t released the other victims of abduction out of fear about what they might divulge about the inner workings of the North Korean government.

To this day, there are four Japanese citizens that went missing during the 70s and 80s, the whereabouts or fate of which are unknown by anyone except North Korea. But that isn’t all.

Charles Jenkins

Before David went missing, another American citizen disappeared and only reemerged years later: it was US Army Sergeant Charles Jenkins.

As it was proven, he had been kidnapped by North Korea and enslaved for 40 years, during which he had to teach English to North Korean spies. Jenkins was released just a few months after David vanished.

Kept Hostage

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Jenkins recalls having been interrogated for 10 days and then transferred to a house with two other Americans where he was a hostage for decades.

“I suffered from enough cold, hunger, beatings, and mental torture to frequently make me wish I was dead,” he recounts. Was that what happened to David? Had he been kidnapped by the North Korean government?

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More Evidence

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“I just thought it was the most ridiculous thing I’d ever heard,” Kathleen recalls. But Melanie Kirkpatrick, a North Korea expert, believed otherwise, “If you know the history of North Korea’s kidnappings of foreign nationals, it’s not so crazy,” she explained.

So, what had really happened to David? And where was he now? Could he have been abducted by the North Korean government?

It Made Sense

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Melanie combed through the evidence, and everything made perfect sense. “We know that North Korean operatives were active in that region [Yunnan] around the same time David was there—with China’s full permission,” she said in a shocking statement.

But that wasn’t all there was to it. She had even more evidence to support her theory.

Abducted

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Melanie claimed that Japanese politician Keiji Furuya told her, “It is most probable that a U.S. national has been abducted to North Korea,” back in 2013. But the most convincing evidence only surfaced in 2016.

An informant had come forward with new information, according to a South Korean organization that specialized in North Korean kidnappings.

Wild Claims

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Some sources inside Japan made some wild claims about David’s whereabouts, namely that he had been kidnapped by North Korean officials and forced to teach Kim Jun-un, the infamous president of North Korea, English!

This information was even corroborated by Choi Sung-Yong, who was the head of the Abductees’ Family Union in Seoul. Could these claims possibly be true?

A New Name

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Sung-Yong then went on to provide more information, stating that David had changed his name and now went by Yoon Bong Soo and that he had also married a woman named Kim Eun Hye.

Could that be why nobody could track David down? Had David gone native in North Korea? This is what David’s mother said about this possibility after a conversation with Sung-Yong:

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Part Of Their Plan

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“It should be emphasized that that is part of the North Korean plan,” Kathleen said. “If North Korea captures you, they’re going to give you a wife; you have children, so you settle down and like it there, and you enjoy it and give them your best.”

“We in our hearts think he’s alive. We think he’s probably teaching English. That’s the most likely thing to use him for.” There was one problem with this theory, though…

Not 100% Sure

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Sung-Yong’s information came with a caveat: he was only about 50% certain that the information was reliable.

“To us, the ideas are not new,” Roy Sneddon said. “We have no proof that it’s reliable, to be honest,” said David’s mother. So it wasn’t like they could trust 100% what Sung-Yong said; despite all the coincidences and North Korea’s history, it was just a hypothesis until new evidence surfaced.

Just A Possibility

Photo: Help Find David Sneddon

So David’s parents couldn’t afford to get their hopes up just to discover that none of the information about their son was true. It was just another possibility, but they had to wait for more evidence.

And besides the unreliability of the information, there was something else that complicated the issue further; it was something that involved the Japanese government.

Ulterior Motives

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Some officials in Washington believed that the Japanese government had an ulterior motive when it came to David, the missing U.S. citizen.

They believed that Seoul’s Abductees’ Family Union was only raising suspicions about kidnapped Americans and drawing attention to David’s story so that the United States would intervene—and help abducted Japanese citizens in the process!

Not Credible

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The U.S. State Department then said that all the evidence that had been uncovered in David’s case was purely circumstantial and not conducive to any definite, certain conclusion.

The U.S. State Department said there was “no credible information to substantiate the idea that he has been abducted.” So in the meantime, until there was more information, David’s parents were left in the dark. What could they do now?

Other Theories

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Now, the Sneddons were stuck with evidence that they felt was convincing enough for them to believe that David’s disappearance did indeed have something to do with North Korea.

“My thought initially,” Roy Sneddon said, “is they [North Koreans] mistook him for someone who was trying to move North Koreans out.” Had that been the case, David’s fate would have probably been a grim one.

Never Giving Up

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The Sneddons weren’t about to give up the search for their missing son, though. They decided to take another step forward and try to get help from the House of Representatives.

In June 2017, Utah Senator Mike Lee and Representative Chris Stewart, who had been in contact with the Sneddons, urged the U.S. president to find some definitive answers.

Finding Comfort

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But while the Sneddons waited and prayed for a break in the case, they took comfort from wherever they could.

“If my son has a part in helping North Koreans have a normal life in any way, I would just be thrilled,” Kathleen said. But still, day and night, they were tortured by the same thought: would they ever hear from David again?

“I Want An Answer”

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“I want an answer to what happened,” says Jenny Sneddon Reuel, David’s younger sister. “I lost a confidant and a best friend. That longing never goes away. There are moments when I will do something or hear a song that reminds me of Dave,” she said.

In 2019, State Department spokeswoman Katina Adams spoke about the issue after talking to Japanese, South Korean, and North Korean officers. This is what she said:

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Adams’ Declarations

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“While we did not receive an official response, the DPRK government publicly denied claims that Mr. Sneddon is living in Pyongyang,” she said.

“Thus far, we have not been able to verify any information suggesting that David Sneddon was abducted from China by North Korean officials or is alive in North Korea, but we will continue our efforts to search for any verifiable information.”

Do They Even Care?

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“We understand that this might not be the top of the American priority. We recognize that the denuclearization negotiations are paramount,” said Bailey, the friend who accompanied David across China.

“But if Trump is going to go and meet with Kim Jong Un, there is a real question as to whether he is going to bring this up. No one knows if Trump has even heard about this case. I’m not sure if people even care,”

No Comment

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During his term in office, Donald Trump made no public mention of David’s disappearance. Current president Joe Biden hasn’t made any public comments either.

However, the Japanese prime minister has mentioned some recent talks with Biden where the president expressed his support on the issue of the abductions of Japanese citizens. Will the president speak on David’s vanishing sometime, though?

Waiting For News

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In the meantime, David’s family is still waiting for any news on the case. “I still don’t have an answer to what happened to my brother,” his sister said.

“I know that there is nothing verifiable, but why was there no body or clothes or anything? Even if someone showed me a T-shirt, that would mean something.”

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