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    Funeral for man entombed for 27 years in chimney

    ABBEVILLE, La. (AP) — The narrow, brick chimney of a Louisiana bank became his tomb for 27 years and now Joseph Schexnider will be laid to rest Sunday in a proper grave with a proper farewell by his family. Still, his brother Robert wonders, how did he wind up in that chimney? Didn't anyone hear any cries for help? Was it a robbery attempt gone awry, an accident or something more sinister?

    "At least we know where he is now," Schexnider, 48, said, tears welling in his eyes ahead of his brother's weekend funeral and burial. "At least he's home."

    Click photo to view more images (AP/Abbeville Police Department)Click photo to view more images (AP/Abbeville Police Department)

    Nearly three decades after he disappeared, much mystery lingers about the case of Joseph Schexnider and involving a small town bank in the southern Louisiana city of Abbeville. Police say Schexnider became trapped and apparently died in the bank's chimney in 1984. But beyond that, they know little more.

    "Everybody has an opinion," said Lt. David Hardy, chief of investigations for the Abbeville Police Department. "But no one has evidence to say one way or another."

    If Joseph Schexnider did cry out for help, no one heard his pleas. The stench of death was never detected.

    The decades rolled on until last May when a construction worker helping turn the bank's vacant second floor into offices tugged some fabric out of the chimney and was showered with old clothes and human bones.

    Described as sweet-natured and relaxed by the few who remember him, Joseph Schexnider was 22 when his family last saw him in January 1984. He had no criminal record, but was wanted for possessing a stolen car.

    A lanky, rambling man, Schexnider was prone to wandering at an early age.

    In the years after they last saw them, his family, his mother, and two brothers and a sister, had not reported him missing — and no one searched for him.

    "My mother worried about him, but I just said, 'Mom, that's just Joseph being Joseph,'" Robert Schexnider said. "He was always taking off for somewhere."

    Joseph first ran off around the age of 9 or 10, Robert recalled, adding his brother had dropped out of high school in the ninth grade.

    He worked now and then at this and that, quitting jobs when he became tired and moving on. He was briefly in the Louisiana National Guard, leaving with a medical discharge. One of the few pictures of him shows him in uniform, his dark eyes looking off into the distance.

    "He was always going off somewhere," Robert Schexnider said. "He told me he'd seen every state in the country."

    Schexnider followed carnivals and once traveled with a circus. He told his brother he hawked cotton candy and peanuts with the shows, traveling with the circus to New York where he was stranded when it left to go overseas.

    "He didn't have enough money to get home, so the church helped him out," recalled Francis Plaisance, a city councilman and the pastor of the church the Schexniders attended. "I remember him as being a nice kid."

    Plaisance also remembers Joseph as a somewhat simple person. When the church sent a plane ticket to New York for him to come home, Schexnider was unable to navigate the airport.

    "We ended up having a pastor up there walking him through it and put him on the plane," Plaisance said.

    Jason Hebert, now a detective with Abbeville Police, went to elementary school with Joseph Schexnider. He described him as quiet kid, on the fringe of a group of young boys that made mischief in the town.

    "He was just another kid," Hebert said. "Nothing really stood out about him."

    With the remains found in the chimney were a yellow long-sleeve shirt, a pair of jeans, blue tennis shoes, and jockey shorts with Schexnider's name printed in the waistband. There also was a magazine and gloves.

    He had a wallet with a copy of his birth certificate, a Social Security card and a few pictures.

    "There was no sign of foul play," Hardy said. But, he said, there is no way to determine the cause of death.

    A DNA test confirmed his identity.

    From the way the skeleton was recovered, Hardy said it appeared Schexnider went into the 14-inch-by-14-inch chimney feet first. Because the chimney narrowed sharply at the bottom, he then was apparently unable to maneuver his way back out.

    There was no way out at the bottom of the chute, which ended in a 3-inch opening to a narrow fireplace on the second floor of the bank building.

    "He was stuck with nowhere to go," Hardy said. If he had called for help — Hardy points out — he would have been 20 feet above the street, and encased in bricks.

    "His voice would have been carried up and away from the street," Hardy added.

    None of the people working on the floor below reported any strange sounds. No one ever went into the seldom-used second floor and reported any strange smells.

    Abbeville is home to 12,000 people. Its picturesque downtown is a collection of late 19th-century one- and two-story buildings that have been carefully restored. The flat rooftops are well known to the town children. The two-story brick Abbeville Bank stands on a corner, its roof offering a view across the courthouse and beyond.

    Access to the one- and two-story roofs was always an easy climb, Hebert said. He scampered on them as a kid; now as a police officer, he's chased children off the rooftops.

    "We played up there a lot," Hebert said. "But I don't remember anyone ever going around the chimneys."

    The chimneys on the downtown roofs were capped in 1987, but Schexnider went unnoticed.

    His brother won't guess why Joseph went into the chimney, but acknowledged in his final days in town that Joseph had gotten in "with a bad crowd." He was carrying no burglary tools when found or anything to carry away money if he had planned to rob the bank.

    Plaisance said he could see it as a misconceived burglary plan on Schexnider's part, however.

    "He was the kind of guy who would do things without really thinking them through," Plaisance said.

    After so many decades and so few clues, Abbeville Police have declared the case closed.

     

    940 comments

    • Conservatives R Evil  •  6 mths ago
      How long do think it took for him to die?.. I guess first, he had to have been dehydrated, maybe 3-4 days, or maybe his own carbon dioxide suffacated him.. Who knows, I hope he just stopped breathing and died quick.. To think that your stuck in a vertical position for days on end, slowley dying is horrible. Like some midevil torture.
    • Katrina L  •  6 mths ago
      I feel bad for the construction worker.
    • A.A.  •  6 mths ago
      They put the case to rest? But he was never reported missing. He had no criminal record, yet was wanted for stealing a car? He was a good boy, yet he was one of the fringe boys who always made trouble? #$%$ is with this article?
    • Blank  •  6 mths ago
      Sure he just jumped in feet first....probably some other bad news kids put him in there and left him. Bank Robber or not no one deserves that fear and lingering death. He was only 22 think again how stupid you were/are at 22 you know very little.
    • Will  •  6 mths ago
      Name the top reasons for being stuck in the chimney of a bank.

      1. Gonna try to sneak down the chimney (just like santa does) and rob the bank.
      2. Refer back to 1. There is no other reason for being there.
    • Papa  •  6 mths ago
      Twenty-seven years? A body starts to decompose and give off odors within a few days of death. Nobody ever smelled anything? That smell permeates everything around it. If you've ever experienced a dead body you would know what I mean. In 27 years that fireplace was never used? No body ever wondered why the flue didn't seem to work right? Something is off about this story....
    • artTEACH  •  6 mths ago
      I imagine someone else was with him and never came forward.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  6 mths ago
      I feel for the construction worker... shower of clothes and bones? Ewe
    • A Yahoo! User  •  6 mths ago
      Poor guy died from the flue. RIP.
    • imautobot  •  6 mths ago
      "He had no criminal record, but was wanted for possessing a stolen car."

      I can't be the only one confused by that statement.
    • Donna  •  6 mths ago
      No matter what the story is and the family may never know he deserves a proper burial. He is
      finally at rest and so is his family.
    • Simon  •  6 mths ago
      I thought they said the family never reported him missing. Then at the end of the article they said they closed the case after so many decades. Strange
    • Dougie  •  6 mths ago
      You think capitalization isn't important? It's the difference between:I helped my Uncle Jack off a horse. I helped my uncle jack off a horse.Stop being purposely illiterate because you're lazy. It makes you look like a #$%$
    • Carlos  •  6 mths ago
      "construction worker helping turn the bank's vacant second floor into offices tugged some fabric out of the chimney and was showered with old clothes and human bones" I bet that construction worked FREAKED the f out! Hope he didn't just eat lunch a few minutes before that...
    • MC242  •  6 mths ago
      Wow, lots of comments about the "stupid" guy. Sounds to me like he may have had a mental disability of some sort. Have a little sympathy for the dead, we will all be there someday.
    • BulldogStGeorge  •  6 mths ago
      Whatever he did or did not do, at least he will have the dignity of a funeral. None of us know the circumstances.
    • Krissy  •  6 mths ago
      When this story first came out, they made it seem like he was a little more of a bad boy around the time of his disappearance than what is now being noted. Having brought a magazine with him, I'm thinking this isn't a case of foul play. However, them saying they can't determine a cause of death makes me wonder. They can figure out what killed someone 2000 years ago, but they can't determine the cause of death for this young man? If it had been foulplay, one would think he would have some broken bones, a smashed skull or something of the sort.
    • Fraulein  •  6 mths ago
      Whatever his intentions were, it is still sad. Obviously this guy did not have full possession of his faculties and was most likely borderline developmentally disabled. Show some respect-NOBODY deserves to die like that. None of us are such perfect human beings that we have the right to shower judgment on another person.
    • andy  •  6 mths ago
      That's just an awful way to go. I feel for his family
    • peacedove  •  6 mths ago
      Come on Have some compassion for this human being, he was a 22 year old young man and no matter how he was or whatever he was doing, he didn't deserve to die like this.
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