Missing mom-of-two from Wisconsin found alive 62-years-later

A Wisconsin woman who vanished more than six decades ago has been found alive โ€” bringing closure to one of the stateโ€™s oldest cold cases.

Audrey Backeberg, now 82, disappeared in 1962 when she was just 20 years old. At the time, she was a married mother of two living in Reedsburg, a small city with a population of around 1,800.

She left home one summer day to pick up her paycheck โ€” and never returned. For years, her family and local authorities searched desperately for answers. Eventually, the Sauk County Sheriff’s Office closed the case after all leads went cold.

Photograph: Wisconsin missing persons advocacy

But in early 2024, the case was reexamined during a routine cold case review. Detective Isaac Hanson, eager to dig deeper, reopened the investigation and began interviewing those connected to the case while reviewing old records.

In just a few months, Hanson located Audrey โ€” alive, well, and living just outside Wisconsin.

Decades-Long Mystery Finally Solved

Backebergโ€™s sudden disappearance in the ’60s shook her small community. According to the Wisconsin Missing Persons Advocacy organization, Audrey had been going through a troubled period in her marriage, and a criminal complaint had reportedly been filed just days before she vanished.

Her family always believed she wouldnโ€™t have left her two children without a real reason.

In an early twist to the case, the family’s then-14-year-old babysitter told police she had hitchhiked with Audrey to Madison, the state capital.

From there, the two allegedly caught a bus to Indianapolis, Indiana. The teen later changed her mind and returned home, but said Audrey refused to go back. She was last seen near a bus stop โ€” and then disappeared without a trace.

Her husband was investigated and passed a polygraph test, maintaining his innocence.

Detective Isaac Hanson

Found Through a DNA Clue

Detective Hanson finally cracked the case using a modern tool not available in 1962 โ€” genealogy databases. While searching online, he came across an Ancestry.com account belonging to Audreyโ€™s sister. That discovery led him to census data, death records, and eventually, a current address.

โ€œI called the local sheriffโ€™s department and said, โ€˜Hey, thereโ€™s this lady living at this address. Do you have someone who could pop in?โ€™โ€ Hanson told WISN News.

Just ten minutes later, he got a call โ€” it was Audrey. The two spoke for 45 minutes.

No Regrets, Just a New Life

While Hanson has chosen not to disclose the details of their private conversation, he shared that Audrey seemed at peace with her past.

โ€œShe sounded happy. Confident in her decision. No regrets,โ€ he said.
โ€œI think she just moved on from things and did her own thing. She led her life.โ€

Though many questions remain about what drove her to leave and stay away for over 60 years, Audrey Backebergโ€™s reappearance provides long-awaited closure for a family and community left with unanswered questions for far too long.

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