Alaska Has The MOST Missing Persons Cases Of Any State By Far – Here’s Why #scary #strange

To put in context, In Alaska since 1988, more than 16,000 people have disappeared which is a huge number. For every 100,000 people, 164 of them have gone missing which is far higher than any other state by a long shot as the 49 states average out to around just 6 people missing per 100,000. Those figures aren’t skewed for effect for the sake of this episode, it’s a fact and so the question becomes….what exactly is going on in Alaska?

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83 Comments

    1. @@jasontucker8847 Wolves are less likely to attack humans than coyotes.
      Coyotes usually run away unless in big numbers, then they’ll quite possibly nip at you.
      Wolves usually run away too, but in larger groups they tend to go after bigger prey because they can now.
      It’s really only if you’re incredibly unlucky or just too stubborn and willing to die over a deer you hunted or something that the Wolves will not think twice about Merking you for the deer.

    1. There are plenty of Portals in the Wilderness that different types of entities use to traverse back an fourth between dimensions. These are things the government and the world elites are aware of but would never share..

    2. I would recommend David pauliddes missing 411,he talks about those missing in Alaska that fit a certain criteria,as well as others in Canada and America,further afield too…always listen to the indigenous folk…they have much wisdom that isn’t to be sniffed at

  1. most of it is people who think they can ‘rough it’ and go off into the woods hiking, camping, to escape law enforcement or modern life or try to live off grid. rising gang and drug problems, we’ve also got a big domestic violence problem and people to missing from that and likely a serial killer or two. it takes a lot of preparation and experience to deal with how rugged it is out here, even in the cities let alone the wilds. Even then many are still not prepared. Also people drunk wandering from their camps. usually find a lot of bodies all over the state during thaw.

    1. yup. Even experienced folk make one wrong move and that’s it. game over. My great uncle used to get dropped off on islands and hunt, trap, and fish. They stopped at one and he told everyone to stay on the boat. Almost immediately two died getting off. Another set got off w/o real gear. Storm came in fast, they got hypothermia, one died. All in an afternoon.

  2. The new season of *True Detective* takes place in Alaska!
    If you haven’t watched the movie *30 Days of Night* then I highly recommend you do. It’s an Alaskan Vampire tale.

    1. @@n9nesoldecodes642 lol, yeah, it’s a gooder! I just watched the last episode for True Detective, it wasn’t bad but wasn’t as good as the first 3 seasons, imo. Jodie Foster plays an unusual role tho, a foul mouthed Sheriff that is emotionally damaged due to the loss of her young son.

    2. @@amodernalchemist432   Ive been hearing nothing but good stuff about Jodie Fosters role. I was hooked after szn 1. I plan on binging lol glad to hear that was the last episode. That other movie your speaking about, the line “No God Here” was chilling to the bone.

    1. Usually the wildlife waits for the cold to get you. Free snack. That’s why it’s best not to do activities that will pass you out when you’re outside

  3. Yea now that I think about it ..I have known 2 people who moved to Alaska and went missing!!!!! The police have nothing.. They just vanished…its weird

    1. @@Kathy-us6zx it was the last thing I would see. It was like telepathy. I would be asleep n something would urge me to turn over and look out and I would see a white faced owl w huge eyes looking at me. Then I don’t remember anything after that. Like time dilation or something.

  4. Heard an Alaskan trooper say on a documentary he had hundreds of sq miles to cover by himself. And he has to charter private flights into some locations. And if he’s lucky there might be a part time local sheriff to help him when he gets to his destination. Usually he’s on his own.

    1. Everyone usually is bro there maybe one or two guys working at a time because NOTHING BAD EVER HAPPENS in comparison to any city or suburban area. Even wild life attacks are so damn rare and when there are they are provoked. I love waking out in the ozarks by my self no flash lights at night its quiet, sky looks amazing and your safe. Course keep a gun or something handy JUST in case.

      Edit: None of these things are in the woods, no evidence. NOW WHATS IN THE OCEAN OR large bodies of water connect to the ocean. WHO KNOWS.

    1. When I was driving in Kodiak I saw a couple climbing up this rocky cliff side and as they went up and over a bear came sprinting down the left side, crossed the road and went up to where they just went in like 2 seconds

  5. This was the subject of the movie the 4th kind, even though it was fiction, it was based on many of the reports given by the people to actual therapists and professional psychologists in Alaska. People are experiencing something unknown up there and it’s not going away anytime soon, in fact, according to the inuit they have legends going back thousands of years.

  6. I am Yup’ik eskimo and can tell you the land itself feels disconcerting to walk upon, like the difference between a tame and wild animal….you can feel it in your bones, the underlying fear…

    1. Woah dude that’s deep like native American type deep bro. Wisdom at its finest!! Much love from Lehigh acres Florida. We have people disappearing here all the time! But that’s because the canals have gators and panthers so maybe that’s why lol😂

  7. Your research into the cases you cover is admirable, Andrew. The personal narration makes for an easy listen. Much appreciated; from South Africa 🇿🇦 👍

  8. Having been raised in Alaska, we usually chalked disappearances to people getting lost, succumbing to hypothermia, then becoming a snack for a bear. The terrain is intense anywhere you go, even the safest looking places might have fissures/crevasses right under the surface that will swallow you without a trace.
    Also @ 14:37 slight correction, we call them snowmachines not ‘snowmobiles’ lol

    1. “Snowmobile” was a brand name mid to late 1900s, so “snowmachine” became the generic word a few decades ago. Older people still call them “Snowmobiles” purely out of habit, sort of how people still call facial tissue “Kleenex”.

    2. ❤ As a lifelong Alaskan I wholeheartedly agree with this comment…with the exception of the snow machine part.. most of the Alaskan’s i know call them “sleds”

    1. I was thinking that exact thought. It’s a small population and if you move there from across the US no one will know you, you can literally become anyone.

    2. @@teemarie5478I don’t think those people would correlate for the people missing IN Alaska though. Some of them for sure probably are ex convicts starting a new life.

  9. A former co-worker lost her husband on a business trip in Alaska. No wreckage was ever found. Approximately one such disappearance of a small plane happens every single month of the year. Alaska is huge, and the wind currents over the mountain ranges are vicious. It’s no surprise that most are never found; it’s a wild, rugged place, and the searches would take years with only a slim chance of finding a particular crash.

    1. 100% right. I live in a valley in Alaska an we get pounded by the wind so hard in a certain season usually around November – Feb the town loses power so often it’s a regular occurrence and something we expect every year.

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