Alexis Patterson disappeared on her way to Hi-Mount School in Milwaukee on May 3, 2002.
She was 7.
The latest season ofUnsolved, a true-crime podcast for USA TODAY and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, examines the case. The episodes feature exclusive interviews with Alexis’ family and more details about the police investigation than has ever been made public before. Unsolved is available on all podcast platforms.
During the making of Unsolved, a possible connection emerged between Alexis Patterson and Israel Keyes. Here’s what to know:
Keyes was a serial killer from Alaska. He confessed to murdering eight people, though authorities believe he is responsible for 11 killings between 2001 and 2012.
The killings took place across the country, from Alaska to Vermont to New York. Investigators say Keyes stashed so-called “kill kits” in different parts of the country, sometimes years in advance. The kits contained supplies such as weapons, shovels, plastic bags and bottles of Drano.
Keyes was arrested in 2012 when authorities were investigating the disappearance of 18-year-old Samantha Koenig from Anchorage, Alaska.
Keyes posted a ransom note and used Koenig’s ATM card, which led police to Lufkin, Texas, where he was arrested. Koenig’s body was found in a frozen lake in Alaska three weeks after his arrest.
After Keyes was arrested, the FBI took his laptop and his girlfriend’s computer and examined the devices. They found Keyes had been looking up missing people.
He used the online database called the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, otherwise known as NAMUS.
One of the search results was for Alexis Patterson.
Josh Hallmark, creator and host of the podcast “True Crime Bullsh**,” was the first to report on the search results. The title of his podcast comes from a statement Keyes made to the FBI, that he didn’t want his case to get a lot of media attention.
Hallmark said Keyes did have a kill kit in Wisconsin.
The serial killer also had a red truck.
In Milwaukee, some witnesses reportedly said a red truck was spotted near Hi-Mount School in the weeks before Alexis disappeared, and that a person inside the truck tried to take a child from the playground.
Hallmark, an expert on Keyes, does not think so.
For one, Keyes stayed away from major cities. And Keyes had told the FBI after he had his own daughter, he could not target children anymore. At the time Alexis disappeared, Keyes’ daughter was about a year old.
The truck Keyes owned was a vintage model, and all evidence points to him not using the truck in 2002, according to Hallmark.
“I just don’t see him going in broad daylight to a school in a major city to abduct a child,” Hallmark says on Unsolved.
Keyes died by suicide at a jail in Anchorage while awaiting trial in the Koenig case.
Learn more about the Alexis Patterson case by listening to the true-crime podcast Unsolved.