
The Disappearance That Changed Everything
Robert Piest, a 15-year-old sophomore at Maine West High School, was working his final shift at Nisson Pharmacy on Touhy Avenue in Des Plaines on what should have been a night of family celebration. His mother Elizabeth Piest had arrived around 9 p.m. to pick him up for her 46th birthday dinner when Robert made a decision that would cost him his life.
A Job Offer That Led to Murder
The teenager told his mother to wait while he spoke with a man about a construction job paying $5 an hour – nearly double his current pharmacy wages. Robert Piest was never seen alive again after that conversation.


As of 2024, the Nisson Pharmacy building is still standing.
The Investigation Begins
After searching the area with family members, Elizabeth Piest filed a missing person report at the Des Plaines police station at 11:29 p.m. This report would trigger one of the most significant serial killer investigations in American history.
The Connection to John Wayne Gacy
Police quickly identified John Wayne Gacy as the man who had been at the pharmacy that evening discussing construction work. Investigators immediately began surveillance and obtained search warrants for Gacy’s Norwood Park home.
Uncovering a House of Horrors
The search of Gacy’s property led to the horrific discovery of multiple bodies buried on his land, exposing one of America’s most notorious serial killers. Robert Piest’s disappearance became the crucial key that unlocked the case against Gacy.
John Wayne Gacy’s House


John Gacys house was razed and replaced with a new house.
Location Gacy Confessed

The Crypt Of Robert Piest




