After leaving the police force, Paulides wrote books on the topic of Bigfoot, as well as on the disappearances of people in national parks and elsewhere which he attributes to unspecified, unknown causes.
Bigfoot or Sasquatch In his pursuit of
Bigfoot, Paulides has published two Bigfoot-related books and founded the group North America Bigfoot Search, for which he serves as director. Paulides has said North America Bigfoot Search was instrumental in the genesis of a paper published in 2013, which claimed that Bigfoot was real: "The world needs to understand that North America Bigfoot Search was the organizer of the study. We orchestrated the search that led to picking Melba S. Ketchum to conduct a study of bigfoot DNA." The resulting paper documented the analysis of 111 samples of hypothesized Bigfoot
DNA and was written by 11 different authors. The website for the DeNovo Journal of Science was set up on February 4, and there is no indication that Ketchum's work, the only study it has published, was peer reviewed. The ranger knew Paulides' background and asked him to research the issue. He broadened his investigation to include missing people from around the world, and this led to his belief that he has uncovered a mysterious series of worldwide disappearances, which he said defied logical and conventional explanations. Paulides has written at least ten books on this topic. According to
A Sobering Coincidence, he does not yet have a theory on what is causing the disappearances, although he says that the "field of suspects is narrowing." Paulides advised his readers to go outside of their normal
comfort zone to determine who (or what) is the culprit. Paulides' books publicized the fact that the US
National Park Service does not keep an independent list of people that go missing in their parks. The interest in the book series prompted the creation of a documentary film based on the
Missing 411 books; this film was released in 2016. Images of maps made by Paulides regarding his theory have been frequently shared on social media. The theory has also gone viral on
TikTok. Kyle Polich, a
data scientist and host of the
Data Skeptic podcast, documented his analysis of Paulides' claims in the article "Missing411" and presented his analysis to a
SkeptiCamp held in 2017 by the Monterey County Skeptics. He concluded that the allegedly unusual disappearances represent nothing unusual at all, and are instead best explained by non-mysterious causes such as falling or sudden health crises leading to a lone person becoming immobilized off-trail, drowning, bear (or other animal) attack, environmental exposure, or even deliberate disappearance. After analyzing the missing person data, Polich concluded that these cases are not "outside the frequency that one would expect, or that there is anything unexplainable that I was able to identify." This presentation was discussed in a February 2017 article in
Skeptical Inquirer, a publication of the
CSI. In the article,
Susan Gerbic reported "Paulides... gave no reason for these disappearances but
finds odd
correlations for them. For example, two women missing in different years both had names starting with an 'A' with three-letters, Amy and Ann." ==Books==