Jul 31, 2014
Jan 08, 2024
Luke
Tredway
50
10
48 inches
70 lbs
White / Caucasian
Male
On May 23, 1984, a sense of unease settled over a Portland, Oregon, neighborhood as 10-year-old Luke Aaron Tredway vanished. The young boy, a Caucasian male with blond hair and hazel eyes, had been at a friend's house and began his short walk home at approximately 5:15 p.m. He was dressed in a medium to dark blue down jacket with grey shoulders, blue jeans, a dark blue pull-over t-shirt with white and brown stripes, and white imitation leather running shoes adorned with royal blue stripes. When he didn't arrive home as expected, his mother, who was nine months pregnant, grew worried and contacted the police around 7:00 p.m. An official search, however, did not commence until 1:00 a.m. the following morning. Despite the efforts of law enforcement, which included bloodhounds that reportedly tracked his scent to an intersection, the trail went cold, leaving his family and community in anguished uncertainty. For twelve years, Luke's disappearance remained a painful mystery, his case growing cold with the passage of time. Then, in 1996, a chilling breakthrough emerged from the Oregon State Penitentiary. A week before his scheduled execution for other murders, serial killer Douglas Franklin Wright penned a letter to The Oregonian newspaper, confessing to the abduction and murder of Luke Tredway. In his confession, Wright provided a horrifying account, stating he had randomly abducted Luke from the street, held him captive in his apartment for 36 hours, and then tragically ended the boy's life by shooting him six times in the head. Wright, who had a history of violent crimes, including the murders of four homeless men in 1991, claimed he committed the act because he did not want to be discovered. Following the confession, Wright directed investigators to a remote area in the vicinity of Mount Hood, near the Wasco County line, where he claimed to have buried Luke's body in a shallow grave at dawn on May 25, 1984. An extensive search of the specified location was conducted in 1996, but tragically, it yielded no sign of the young boy's remains. Despite the unsuccessful search, authorities generally believe Wright's confession was credible. The case of Luke Tredway, which began as a missing person investigation, was reclassified as a homicide. Though a confession offered a grim explanation for his fate, the inability to recover his remains means that a final, tangible sense of closure remains just out of reach for those who have mourned his absence for decades. The case serves as a somber reminder of a life cut short and a family left with enduring questions and heartache.
May 23, 1984
Portland
Oregon
Multnomah County
No
15574
Portland Police Bureau
Portland
Oregon
Multnomah County
97204
Heidi Helwig
Detective
1111 Southwest 2nd Avenue, Oregon
5038230400
Local
Law Enforcement
84-44032
1984-05-23
Portland Police Bureau
Blond/Strawberry
Hazel
Hazel
05/24/2026