The wife of suspected assassin Vance Boelter has mysteriously disappeared after being caught fleeing with firearms, thousands in cash, and their children, the Daily Mail reported.
Jenny Boelter, 51, president of the couple’s private security company, Praetorian Guard, vanished from public view just hours after her husband, Vance, launched a premeditated rampage that left two prominent Democrat politicians dead and two others fighting for their lives.
The Gateway Pundit previously reported that Jenny Boelter was detained and questioned during a traffic stop that revealed a cache of alarming items in her possession, including a gun, ammunition, large amounts of cash, and multiple passports.
According to a report by KSTP-TV, the vehicle carrying Jenny Boelter and three other family members was stopped outside a convenience store near Onamia, Minnesota, around 10 a.m. Saturday morning — just hours after authorities launched a manhunt for her husband.
According to the Daily Mail, at 6:18 AM Saturday, Jenny received a haunting text message from her husband: “Dad went to war last night. There’s gonna be some people coming to the house armed and trigger happy and I don’t want you guys around.”
That same morning, she fled the family’s $520,000 farmhouse in Green Isle, Minnesota—leaving behind the family dogs, several vehicles, and a stunned neighborhood. She placed just one call to friends, claiming she was in a “safe place,” but refused to give any details. She has not been heard from since.
When Daily Mail reporters sought answers from her family, her brother Jason Doskocil had a blunt message: “Piss off.”
New court filings suggest this was no spur-of-the-moment escape. Vance and Jenny Boelter were reportedly “preppers” with detailed contingency plans. In fact, the feds say Vance had given Jenny a “bailout plan” to follow if disaster struck — and it appears she might have tried to carry it out.
The Minnesota Star Tribune reported:
The federal complaint reveals that at some point, “Boelter had given his wife ‘a bailout plan’” to flee to a relative’s residence in Wisconsin should a disaster unfold. Part of “prepping” includes “anticipating” and adapting to “impending conditions of calamity,” according to a study cited by the National Library of Medicine.
The court filing was written during Boelter’s 43-hour evasion from law enforcement under the belief he may have fled Minnesota following the pair of shootings that killed Minnesota Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband and injured state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette. He was later taken into custody in a field in Green Isle, Minn.
Police stopped Boelter’s wife, along with her four children, more than 100 miles northwest of the family’s home late Saturday morning, according to the complaint and the Mille Lacs County Sheriff. The stop occurred well over 150 miles northwest of the destination of the “bailout plan.”
In a search of the vehicle, officers found a safe, passports for each of the kids and Boelter, at least $10,000 and a pair of pistols in the glove box and inside a cooler. The filing notes Boelter had recently sent the family a group text proclaiming he had gone to war and people with guns may be showing up to their house.
The complaint, unsealed by a federal judge Wednesday, offers the latest detail into Boelter’s life that was punctuated with a non-linear career jumping from food service to international missionary work, local political appointments and funeral homes. An exact motive for the shootings has yet to be announced.
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