Since McDermott's disappearance, there has been unsubstantiated speculation that he faked his own death. The case was featured on ''
America's Most Wanted. In a 2009 feature on Dateline NBC, investigators went undercover to look for him in Mexico, where they believed he might be hiding. The investigators claimed McDermott disappeared to avoid debts, including US$8,000 owed to his ex-wife for child support. Those same investigators created the website FindPatrickMcDermott.com for the sole purpose of trapping McDermott. As the Dateline'' special showed, all visitors' web addresses were logged and mapped. The
Dateline investigators believed in 2009 that McDermott was living in a boat off the west coast of Mexico. They continued to track hits to their website. The
Dateline investigators said there were over 20 sightings of McDermott in Mexico and
Central America. In January 2009, investigators alleged he is alive and well in Mexico, and asking to be left alone. In April 2009, a man
Dateline hired to find McDermott, Philip Klein, released the following statement: After years of searching for the missing man, a group of private investigators hired by
Dateline NBC were alleged to have located McDermott alive and living in Mexico in April 2010. The private investigators, led by Texas-based Philip Klein, claimed to have tracked McDermott down after noticing that a collection of centralized
IP addresses were logging onto the website that followed his presumed whereabouts. The addresses led the investigators to the Mexican-Pacific coast near
Puerto Vallarta, where they claimed McDermott had been living under his birth name, Pat Kim. In 2016, more than a decade after his mysterious disappearance, the Australian weekly magazine ''
Woman's Day claimed investigators found McDermott healthy and alive in the town of Sayulita, Mexico—where they purported that he lived with his new girlfriend. None of the claims were ever substantiated. that New Idea'', a long-running Australian weekly magazine, claimed it had evidence McDermott is alive after receiving photos by US media agency Coleman-Rayner which show a man who matched his description alongside a woman. On January 2, 2018, the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation published a story of a man from
Manitoba, Canada, who identified himself and his wife as the subject of the photo from the 2017 Australian tabloid, as a case of mistaken identification. ==See also==