Robert Kovak |
Robert Kovak grew up in rural Rivesville, West Virginia, a rural coal mining town in the northern part of the state, home to roughly 900 people. He was described as modest, detail-oriented, dedicated to getting things done, friendly and likable.
Kovak was a 1991 graduate of Fairmont Senior High School. He received his undergraduate degree at Fairmont State University near his home in Rivesville, then was accepted into the architecture graduate program at Virginia Tech. It was his first experience at a large university and he rose to the top of his class. He enjoyed living in Blacksburg, where he was close enough to ride his bike to class or to drive home to visit family. He and his brother Michael were just one year apart and always very close. They got together as frequently as they could, especially in the summer when school was out.
On Friday, September 18, 1998, Kovak's mother, Jacqueline Kovack, tried to call him repeatedly, but he wasn't home. After several more tries on Saturday and Sunday with no result and no call back, she became very worried.
Kovak's roommates said they seen him packing clothing earlier in the day. They thought maybe he planned to attend a West Virginia University football game on Saturday. Now his blue laundry hamper was gone, so they assumed he had heading home for the weekend. They estimated he must have left around 5 p.m. He never arrived.
9/18/98 4:30 p.m. - Kovak is positively identified getting gas at the Wilco station on 825 N. Main Street in Blacksburg. He speaks briefly with the gas station attendant, saying he is on his way home to visit friends. He paid for his gas with a check, then took off in his red Geo Tracker, traveling up Progress Street toward his Terrace View apartment.(1) His vehicle is found abandoned four days later.
9/18/98 5:21 p.m. - Video surveillance captures Kovak withdrawing $80 from an ATM at the Freedom First Credit Union on South Main Street in Blacksburg.
9/19/98 4:30 a.m. - Kovak's very good friend from college, Jason Yoho, who was also from Rivesville, drove the same route Kovak was supposed to have taken, only 12 hours later. He told investigators he did not recall a vehicle parked where Rob's Tracker was found, and he could not recall a vehicle being there on his way back on Sunday.
9/19/98 8:00 - 9:00 a.m. - A married couple from Morgantown, WV stops at the Gorge Bridge from 8 to 9 a.m. while traveling to Myrtle Beach, SC. The couple tells police that they always notice vehicles parked on the side of the road, but they did not see a red Tracker.
9/20/98 - Jason Yoho does not recall seeing a vehicle parked on the side of the road on his way home on Sunday.
Kovak's Geo Tracker, similar to this one, was found at the intersection of US Route 19 and Lansing Road near Fayetteville, West Virginia, just beyond the New River Gorge Bridge. |
The vehicle was operational, but it looked dusty. It had also been broken into. A slit had been cut into the soft-top canvas in order to unlock the passenger door. An amp had been taken from the rear cargo area and likely also the hamper Robert had last been seen with. (A resident of Craig County later reported finding an empty blue clothes hamper, missing its lid, on her property, but it wasn't positively identified as Kovak's.) Police theorize that rafters on the New River noticed the abandoned vehicle and broke into it to steal from it. The crime lab found one partial latent fingerprint and one palm print they couldn't identify.
According to his father and brother, those so familiar with that stretch of road would gas up before reaching Fayetteville. They'd know the next station isn't for another 15 miles. It then seems odd that Kovak would bypass a gas station and risk potentially having to leave his beloved vehicle on the side of the road while he fetched gas. Kovak's Tracker was the first vehicle he had ever purchased himself. He was known for keeping it immaculate.
Michael Kovak has said he believes that something happened to his brother in Blacksburg. He told the Collegiate Times, "Where we grew up, you held your own or got picked on. He was small and scrawny, but he was scrappy." He added that his brother was "one of the nicest guys in the world, but if someone tried to pick a fight...he wouldn't shy away." He speculated that someone drove his car as far north as they could, using the 4-wheel drive so that the car would run out of gas quicker. The person wanted it to appear as though Kovak had run out of gas.
Search effort
Dog teams, whitewater rafters and National Park Service rangers helped in multiple searches of the vicinity of where Robert's car was found. Their searches included door-to-door visits to homes on Lansing Road and the Canyon Rim area. State police also conducted helicopter sweeps, and Rob's family and friends walked the area searching for clues. Nothing was found. The area is said to be an immense space near a national forest where search parties would have difficulty finding someone.
When investigators and family searched Robert Kovack's Terrace View apartment in Blacksburg, they discovered that his roommates had packed up nearly all of his things into boxes. They had also taken apart his bed before it was ever inspected, despite direct requests from the Kovak family to stay away. No architecture supplies were found, just a single pen and two stamps. But it seems most of his personal belongings were still in his room, such as his backpack, bike, unopened mail (including a bill for rent), shaving kit, toothbrush and toothpaste. So they may have been trying to save his family the heartache of packing up his belongings.
Remains found
New River Gorge Bridge (See aerial video here.) |
DNA tests confirmed that the remains belonged to Robert Kovak. His wallet with his driver's license and student ID was also found near the remain, along with his car keys.
Evidence on the remains suggest that Kovack was hit by a car, then fell from the bridge.(3) News reports are not saying whether the death was a hit and run, but it sounds like a logical possibility. The investigation is ongoing.
While Kovak did have $12,000 in credit card debt, police do not believe he committed suicide. The young man was nearing graduation and had been hired to work for Blackwood and Associates, an architecture firm in Richmond, VA, after graduation. He also had $1,500 in his bank account from his job as a teaching assistant at Virginia Tech and he was considered a happy-go-lucky guy.
He was hard working, but he was considered a happy-go-lucky guy. In his free time, he played softball, went mountain biking and volunteered for Habitat for Humanity.
Case Details
Name/age: Robert Leroy Kovak, 24
Last seen: 9/18/98, Blacksburg, Virginia
Date Of Birth: October 30, 1973
Physical Description: White male, 6'3"; 175 lbs, dark brown hair; brown eyes, wearing
blue jeans and either polo shirt or T-shirt and watch on left wrist.
If you have any information, call the Blacksburg Police Department at 540-961-1150 or West Virginia State Police at 304-469-2915. Refer to the Agency Case Number (6210-10254)
Sources
(1) Fleming, Caleb. (7 March 2009). Decadelong disappearance. Retrieved September 9, 2010 from
http://www.collegiatetimes.com/stories/13746/decadelong-disappearance
(2) Baker, K.C. (March 11, 2016). Family of Robert Kovack, Virginia Tech Grad Student Missing Since 1998, Waits Anxiously As Authorities Investigate Human Remains. Retrieved June 7, 2019 from https://people.com/crime/robert-kovacks-distraught-family-are-human-remains-connected-to-missing-son/
(3) Demmit, Jacob. (March 14, 2017). DNA confirms remains belong to Virginia Tech student missing since 1998. Retrieved June 7, 2019 from https://www.roanoke.com/news/local/blacksburg/dna-confirms-remains-belong-to-virginia-tech-student-missing-since/article_56a64b59-9fd0-506f-833e-bbfc3121047a.html
Published: 9/26/2010 Last updated: June 7, 2019
Robert sounds like a remarkable young man. We are holding onto hope that he will be brought home to his family so that they might receive some answers.
ReplyDeleteI agree 100 percent Lisa!
ReplyDeleteI have read through this case three times now and still don't know if I have all the particulars of the story right.
Prayers to all of these young mens' family and friends and hopes for the missings safe return!
Thanks for all of your very hard work on this blog!
Thanks, Devin!
ReplyDeleteA lot of details were made available in this case, thanks to a very in-depth article published in the Collegiate Times. Be sure to check that out if you haven't read it yet; it was one of those rare times when I felt like we were hearing the full story. Yet, so many unanswered questions remain in Robert's disappearance. I imagine that his family is longing for answers.
If someone out there has information, it is time to come forward! Leave a tip with the Blacksburg Police Department at 540-961-1150 or West Virginia State Police at 304-469-2915 (Agency Case Number 6210-10254.)
Sad to know he is still missing after all these years. Were his roommates investigated (most likely they were) but is sounds as if something happened to him maybe in the apartment. They then cleaned up, placing evidence and/or clothes/towels in the hamper taking it with them along with Robert.
ReplyDeleteThey then took his vehicle, perhaps traveling off road (that's why was in 4-wheel drive) to dispose of him and the hamper. They may or may not have planned to run out of gas, maybe they did on purpose to make it look like Robert ran out of gas then had to walk to gas station, thus disappearing.
If he was planning on going home, and took his dirty laundry, then he would have almost certainly brought his personal items like shaving kit and toothbrush along too.
It was probably a made up story to say that he planned to go home, his parents didn't know and they felt he would have certainly called them to tell them he was coming. Something probably happened to him and the story was made up after the fact to explain why they hadn't seen him since Friday.
Too many things that don't fit.
How was Michael small and scrawny @ 6'1"-6'3" and 180+ pounds?
ReplyDeleteWondered the same thing
DeleteToday March 10 2016 a body was found near the bridge where Roberts car was found. I remember this case well, I live in the area and followed it closely. I always thought it sounded a little odd Porzio was told by the friends that he was going home. The Wilco station attendant said Rob said " he was going home to see (or hangout ) with friends, but didn't say what home or what friends. And the roommates had moved out his things before his car was even processed. I have thought about this all to frequently. I hope for the family that justice will come to those who are responsible. I thought about this case several times a year and today I would add my thoughts.
ReplyDeleteThey have found remains not far from where Roberts vehicle was located. His ID was there as well. http://www.people.com/people/mobile/article/0,,20993180,00.html
ReplyDeleteBody found march 2016
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing such a nice piece of information with us. pulabo wallet
ReplyDeleteThe date is very near Autumnal Equinox.
ReplyDelete