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Case Description    (LOCATED)

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Ronald Wayne Jager, 59, went missing on August 21, 2000, after launching his boat from the Whitehall Municipal Boat Launch in Whitehall, Michigan. He was an experienced fisherman and often spent time fishing in Lake Michigan. His boat was found beached on the Wisconsin shoreline, 70 miles from where he was last seen, but Ronald himself was not located.

In 2014, skeletal remains, including a jawbone and a femur, washed up on separate Michigan shores and were later identified as Ronald Ja ...Read More
Last Seen: Aug 21, 2000

Victim Details

Mar 12, 2020

May 11, 2022

Ronald

Jager

83

59

72 inches

190 lbs

White / Caucasian

Male

On August 21, 2000, 59-year-old Ronald Wayne Jager, an experienced fisherman from Fruitland Township, embarked on a fishing trip on Lake Michigan. He launched his boat from the Whitehall Municipal Boat Launch in Whitehall, Michigan, leaving his car and trailer behind. This outing was a common pastime for Jager, who often frequented the waters of the great lake. Concern grew when he did not return as expected. A few days later, his boat was discovered washed ashore in Wisconsin, approximately 70 to 80 miles from where he had started his journey. Despite the recovery of his vessel, which reportedly had life jackets on board and the electric motor still engaged, there was no sign of Ronald Jager. The initial searches conducted by the U.S. Coast Guard following his disappearance yielded no clues as to his whereabouts, and the case went cold, leaving his family with unanswered questions for over a decade. It wasn't until years later that a significant breakthrough occurred. In August of 2014, partial human remains, specifically a maxilla (upper jawbone) with teeth, were discovered washed up on a Lake Michigan beach in Ganges Township, Allegan County. That same year, another set of partial remains was recovered in Oceana County. These discoveries prompted a complex investigation to identify the unknown individual. The remains were sent for pathological examination, but an immediate identification could not be made. The case eventually involved the DNA Doe Project, which specializes in using investigative genetic genealogy to identify deceased individuals. Investigators were able to get a DNA sample from one of Jager's adult children to compare with the DNA extracted from the recovered remains. In April 2022, nearly twenty-two years after he was last seen, the DNA testing confirmed that the remains found in both Allegan and Oceana counties belonged to Ronald Wayne Jager. While the identification brought a long-awaited answer to his family, the exact circumstances surrounding how he ended up in the water remain undetermined, though drowning was considered a plausible scenario by authorities. The case, which began as a missing person report, transitioned into a years-long death investigation, ultimately providing a degree of closure through the tireless work of multiple law enforcement agencies and forensic specialists.

Aug 21, 2000

Whitehall

Michigan

Muskegon County

Whitehall

No

80249

Muskegon County Sheriff's Office

Muskegon

Michigan

Muskegon County

49440

Robert Kanaar

Detective

25 W Walton Ave, Michigan

2317247106

County

Law Enforcement

2000-10402

Muskegon County Sheriff's Office

Gray or Partially Gray

Blue

Blue

Yes

05/21/2026


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