Daniel Rassier didn't know that he was being recorded when, in 2009, he told Patty Wetterling that he thought authorities had done a poor job of investigating the abduction of her 11-year-old son Jacob decades earlier.
It was partly retribution for those comments, Rassier alleges in a federal lawsuit, that law enforcement wrongly went after him, digging up his farm to search for human remains and making it evident that he was a "person of interest" in one of the state's most high-profile criminal investigations.
In a 34-page lawsuit filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court, Rassier alleges Stearns County Sheriff John Sanner, former Capt. Pam Jensen, and state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) agent Ken McDonald defamed him and intentionally inflicted emotional distress, among other claims.
The suit alleges that Sanner "had engaged in conduct for years to prevent the crime from being solved and had illegally, and in a conspiratorial, intentional, and/or reckless fashion, with Jensen and McDonald, publicly accused an innocent citizen."
Messages left with the Stearns County sheriff and his office were not returned Wednesday. The Stearns County attorney's office referred questions to attorney Jason Hiveley, who wrote in an e-mail that the county and its employees will file their response in court after they have been properly served with the legal paperwork.
"We will not be commenting further ..." Hiveley wrote, "except to say the actions of the Sheriff's Department Investigators were reasonable and we believe this case will ultimately be resolved in their favor."
A BCA spokeswoman said the agency typically does not comment on pending litigation.
Rassier, 61, lived on a farm with his parents near the spot in St. Joseph, Minn., where Jacob Wetterling was abducted. Rassier was home alone that night, his parents on a European vacation.