Shelly Julson had gone missing. Now Bismarck Police Department Officer Cliff Emmert was digging into her world to figure out what might have gone wrong.
Listen to Episode Number 2 — In Shelly's Shadows
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Emmert's investigation took him back through the haunts of Julson's life, according to the Dakota Spotlight podcast, season 7, episode 2 — available on podcast apps now.
Emmert stopped into bars, casinos, bingo halls and bowling alleys, seeking a better understanding of the 26-year-old's world. What he found raised some troubling questions about what might have happened to Julson.
She had told other she was being harassed and possibly followed. She was reportedly having problems with two different men, Kevin and Tony. Then there were the men with whom she spoke just a few days before, on Sunday night. Who were they? Emmert sought answers.
Gallery - Browse with arrow on right
1/16: ÍáÍáÂþ» portrait of a smiling Shelly Julson 18 years of age wearing blue button-down shirt under a purple knitted vest. Shelly has feathered, shoulder-length red-brown hair and dark eyes and eyebrows.
2/16: Bismarck Police Department's missing poster for Shelly Julson
Contributed / Bismarck Police Department
3/16: Bismarck Police officer Cliff Emmert was one of several officers who looked into Shelly Julson's past after she vanished under mysterious circumstances in August of 1994. He learned that Shelly had been getting harrased and her car had been vandalized just prior to her disappearence.
Contributed / Bismarck Police Department
4/16: Staff photo of Lieutenant Don Schaffer of the Bismarck Police Department. While investigating Michele Julson's disappearence in 1994, investigators received multiple tips informing them that Schaffer was one of several persons harrasing Julson at a local bar, The Burnt Creek Club. Julson's cold case file shows no indication that Schaffer was ever spoken to by investigators in regards to Julson's case. One hundred and four pages of Julson's investigative file were removed in 1994 at the request of then head of investigations Lieutenant Myron Heinle.
Contributed / Bismarck Police Department
5/16: Michele Julson
Contributed / State Historical Society of North Dakota
6/16: When investigators walked the perimeter of Shelly Julson's home the windows in the back were open. The front door was locked and the TV was on.
James Wolner / Forum News Service
7/16: Shelly said she was going to pick up her paycheck at the Fort Abraham Lincoln Foundation office, 309 East Broadway in Bismarck. She never picked up her check.
James Wolner / Forum News Service
8/16: Lieutenant Myron Heinle was head of investigations during the initial investigation into Michele Julson's disappearance. In 1994, for reasons unknown, Heinle directed investigators to remove one hundred and four pages of Julson's police file. The contents of those pages is unknown.
Contributed / Bismarck Police Department
9/16: Shelly worked dealing black jack at the burnt creek club and had been dating Tony Hulm a bartender there. Shelly told friends and family the patrons at the bar were harassing her and she had asked her supervisor to transfer to a different location. On more than one occasion, Shelly believed someone had followed her home from the bar and her car was vandalized.
Contributed / State Historical Society of North Dakota
10/16: Shelly worked dealing black jack at the burnt creek club and had been dating Tony Hulm a bartender there. Shelly told friends and family the patrons at the bar were harassing her and she had asked her supervisor to transfer to a different location. On more than one occasion, Shelly believed someone had followed her home from the bar and her car was vandalized.
Contributed / State Historical Society of North Dakota
11/16: Shelly Julson occasionally worked at the Elbow Room. Different from today, in 1994 the bar was located near 3rd street and Main. 36 hours before Shelly disappeared she was witnessed talking to two men in the parking lot just after closing. The men had stated they were railroad workers and one of the men was going to be laid over in Bismarck a couple more days.
James Wolner / Forum News Service
12/16: Michele Julson
Contributed / State Historical Society of North Dakota
13/16: Bismarck Police officer Dennis Walls was the first investigator to work on Shelly's case.
Contributed / Bismarck Police Department
14/16: Officer Julie Thompson worked on Shelly's case. Thompson focused on looking into Shelly's banking activity and she was also present when Shelly's home was investigated and when her car was located.
Contributed / Bismarck Police Department
15/16: Shelly's parents Wesley and Linda Julson submitted this handwritten letter to Bismarck PD to further substantiate their strong belief that Shelly would not leave her son willingly.
Contributed / Bismarck Police Department
16/16: Wesley and Linda Julson outside their home in Center, North Dakota on June 21, 2022. The Julsons question how well Bismarck Police Department handled Shelly's case. Shelly disappeared on August 2, 1994 after dropping her son Jaden at his paternal grandparents home. She was going to pick up her paycheck and run errands but never returned.
James Wolner / Forum News Service
He also received an uncomfortable tip. There was a report that another Bismarck Police Department officer had been harassing Shelly during her job at The Burnt Creek Bar.
The strands of evidence helped Emmert flesh out Julson's life prior to her disappearance, but they also raised more questions than they answer.
About Dakota Spotlight, Season Seven: 'Call Me Shelly — The Mysterious Disappearance of Michele Julson'
In this season of Dakota Spotlight, creator, host and Regional Emmy Award-winner James Wolner looks into the cold case of 26-year-old Michele "Shelly" Julson, who vanished from Bismarck, North Dakota on Aug. 2, 1994. Granted exclusive, unprecedented access by police to the cold-case file, Wolner presents a play-by-play review of the initial investigation and further examines the strange events surrounding Shelly's life and her disappearance.
With the aid of new interviews with Shelly’s friends, family and retired police investigators, Wolner dives into the shadows of Shelly’s world at the time — Bismarck’s bar and gambling scene — and tracks the movements of several persons of interest. All in an attempt to answer the biggest questions of the case: What happened to Shelly? Where is she now?
(In alphabetical order)
- Chris Aziz: Bartender at the Elbow Room. Witnessed Shelly with two men Sunday night.
- James Becker: Shelly's friend
- Kim Borner: Shelly's friend
- Russ Bryant: Investigator for Burlington Northern Railroad
- Clifford Emmert: Bismarck Police Department investigator
- Jack Erhardt: Kevin Woodworth's foreman at Miller Insulation
- Larry Helfenstein: Shelly's friend
- Tony Hulm: Shelly's latest on-again/off-again boyfriend, and a bartender at Burnt Creek Club
- Wes Julson: Shelly's father
- Bonnie Munsch: Shelly's friend and coworker, worked with Shelly at the Burnt Creek Club the night before Shelly vanished. Bonnie felt Shelly did not seem her usual self that night.
- Tarileen Olson: Blackjack dealer at Fort Abraham Lincoln Foundation
- Mike Quinn: Agent at North Dakota bureau of criminal investigation
- Don Schaffer: Bismarck police officer and patron at Burnt Creek Club. Shelly told friends Schaffer had been harassing her at work.
- Troy Schaner: Bismarck police officer who helped North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigation's aerial search for Shelly's car
- Carol Thomas: Assistant manager at The Fleck House hotel near The Elbow Room bar
- Julie Thompson: investigator with the Bismarck Police Department
- Dennis Walls: Bismarck Police Department sergeant who was the initial and main investigator on the Julson case
- Kevin Woodworth: Shelly's former boyfriend and Jaden's father
- Richard Woodworth: Jaden's paternal grandfather and the last person to acknowledge having seen her when she dropped Jaden at 104 American Ave.
People in previous episodes
- Officer Robbie Carvell: Bismarck Police Department officer and patrolman, who responded to the Julson missing person report
- Linda Julson: Shelly's mother
- Michele "Shelly" Julson: a 26-year-old blackjack dealer and mother of 3-year-old Jaden, who went missing on Aug. 2, 1994
- Jaden Woodworth: Shelly's 3-year-old son
Jeremy Fugleberg is editor of The Vault, Forum Communications Co.'s home for Midwest history, mysteries, crime and culture.