The Unsolved Mystery of Joshua Maddux
In May 2008, 18-year-old Joshua Maddux went for a walk near his home in Woodland Park, Colorado — and never returned.
Josh, a bright and creative teen who loved nature, had already endured tragedy: his parents’ divorce and his brother’s suicide. Despite this, he remained optimistic and adventurous. After telling his sister he was heading out, he vanished.
A search began, but after days of no leads, he was reported missing. Years passed with no trace. His family held onto hope, imagining he might be off living a quiet, artistic life.
Seven years later, in 2015, construction workers discovered a mummified body inside a chimney of an abandoned cabin less than a mile from his home. It was Josh.
Strangely, his clothes were found neatly folded inside the cabin, and a heavy wooden bar had been placed to block the fireplace. He wore only a thermal shirt.
The coroner found no signs of trauma and initially ruled the death accidental — suggesting Josh climbed in the chimney and got stuck. But the cabin’s owner disputed this, saying a steel mesh covered the chimney, making entry from the top nearly impossible.
Due to these inconsistencies, the case was reopened. The revised conclusion listed the cause of death as accident, murder, or undetermined. Some believed he was placed there by someone else, citing tips and a possible suspect with a violent history, though nothing was confirmed.
For Josh’s family, the discovery ended years of uncertainty but brought little closure.
“It’s a real conundrum,” said his sister Kate. “We’ll never really know what happened.”