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Post by LadyBlue on May 8, 2004 21:06:48 GMT -5
February 28, 2003 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- A body recovered Thursday from the Mississippi River near downtown Minneapolis was that of a missing University of Minnesota student Christopher Jenkins, the family's private investigator said. Jenkins, 21, had been missing since leaving a downtown bar Oct. 31. His family conducted a statewide search to find the university senior. "It's his body, there's no question about it," said Chuck Loesch, whom the family hired after their son's disappearance. He said Jenkins' father, Steve Jenkins, called him at his Lakeville home about 8:30 p.m. with the news. "He's just destroyed, and his wife is worse; she's torn in half," Loesch said. "Now they know where their son is, but they don't know how he got there." Authorities had no official confirmation that the recovered body was Jenkins. Michael Opitz, an investigator with the Hennepin County Medical Examiner's Office, said the body, found near the Third Avenue Bridge, appears to be that of a man. He said it was difficult to determine age because the body had been in the water for so long. He said the office hoped to make a positive identification Friday. Loesch said that Minneapolis Police Sgt. Pete Jackson notified the family at their Burlington, Wis., home about 8 p.m. Thursday. In addition, authorities said the body was clad in leather leggings or leather pants -- a possible match of the American Indian Halloween costume Jenkins was wearing when he disappeared. "It could be Chris Jenkins or it could be somebody else" who has been missing, Opitz said. "But we need to get all of the dental records and things we need to make or rule out who this might be." The body was lodged in some logs beneath the bridge, near a waterfall. Two pedestrians spotted the body from the bridge and called police around 4 p.m. The body was recovered about two hours later. Jenkins' disappearance was the first of three such instances where Minnesota college students went missing last fall. Michael Noll, a 22-year-old Rochester native and University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire student, disappeared Nov. 6 when he left an Eau Claire bar just before midnight after celebrating his birthday. Joshua Guimond, 20, has been missing since Nov. 9. The St. John's University student and Maple Lake native was last seen about midnight leaving a Collegeville party. brainerddispatch.com/stories/022803/sne_0228030003.html
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Post by LadyBlue on May 16, 2004 23:17:20 GMT -5
I'm not sure how much this extends beyond the "basic facts" you already know, king_vera-ga, but here's what I found... On July 29, 1998, at approximately 8:30 p.m., Julie Holmquist, 16, left to go in-line skating from her home in Hallock, Minnesota. She was last seen alive skating alone on a road between Hallock and the adjoining town of Orleans, Minnesota. Holmquist was last seen at 9 p.m. by a passing driver, who spotted her along a rural highway four miles from town. The route was said to be a popular stretch for local skaters. She reportedly went out on the skates as part of her training regimen for the upcoming volleyball season. On August 20, 1998 (a Thursday), the victim's body was found in a shallow gravel pit pond in Lancaster, Minnesota, approximately ten miles from where she was last seen. A hunter scouting an area found her body in a shallow pond in a rural area near Lancaster. Her skates were still on, and investigators said the appearance of her clothes indicated she might have been sexually assaulted, reported the Associated Press wire service. Because the gravel pit was known as a popular local party spot, authorities believed that the perpetrator could be a local person or someone with local knowledge. According to a "Channel 4000" news report dated August 24, 1998, an unidentified 45-year-old man, who lived in a Minneapolis apartment and had another home near Hallock, had his properties searched by authorities. The man said, "he feels like he is being set up by FBI agents," reported The Associated Press. The man was also apparently given a lie detector test by the F.B.I. and noted that he had left Lancaster shortly after Holmquist went missing. The same article notes that Kittson County Sheriff Ray Hunt reiterated to AP that investigators continue to interview many people and are not close to making an arrest. Her funeral took place on August 31, 1998. authorities still had not released the cause of death at that date. Her funeral was postponed so the Ramsey County medical examiner could finish work on the autopsy, reported The Associated Press. Sources: www.thelutheran.org/9810/page37b.htmlIn July 1999, Kittson County Sheriff Ray Hunt reportedly made some comments that a kidnapping suspect and murder suspect, Donald Blom, was also a suspect in the Holmquist case. However, Hunt, later "backed off" those comments and noted, "that a state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension agent told him 'unequivocally' that Blom has been discounted as a suspect in the unsolved Holmquist case." Blom was later convicted of the Poirier murder. A reported "drifter from Colorado" who was also named as a suspect in the Poirer case and abduction asnd murder of a Lousiana woman was also investigated for possible connections to the Holmquist case. "When authorities searched his van and motel room, they found maps of several states, including Minnesota." On September 1, 1998, the Kittson county sheriff said an autopsy confirmed Julie Holmquist was a homicide victim. Sheriff Ray Hunt declined to release any further details about the crime. As far as I can determine no other details concerning the autopsy or evidence have been publically released. Source: news.mpr.org/programs/morninged/listings/me19980831.shtmlThere is still an active "up to $100,000" reward being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of person(s) responsible for the murder of Julie Ann Holmquis by "Spotlight on Crime" a fund that provides cash rewards for information that helps solve violent crimes. Spotlight on Crime is a collaboration between members of the Minnesota Business Partnership and public safety officials. Source: www.spotlightoncrime.org/case_holmquist_julie.htmlThere have been no arrests made. Although containing no further information that I've related here, you might be interested in the following inactive site I discovered using the Internet Archives... web.archive.org/web/20011121184603/www.corajones.org/julie/
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Post by LadyBlue on May 22, 2004 7:03:07 GMT -5
Authorities on Thursday identified a body of a Fargo man pulled from the Red River. Crews recovered 43-year-old Terry Dean Dahle's body from the river in Moorhead around 8:00 Wednesday night. Someone called police at the height of Wednesday night's thunderstorms, saying they saw the body in the water. Moorhead police are asking anyone who had contact with Dahle in the past few weeks to contact them. www.kvlytv11.com/news.shtml
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Post by LadyBlue on Jun 1, 2004 11:01:53 GMT -5
Police say a man has confessed in a Duluth cold case. At a press conference today, Duluth's police chief said 57-year-old Donald Bloomer has confessed to shooting Julie Hill almost 24 years ago. Hill was 22 when she was killed in July 1980 Police reopened the investigation into Hill's disappearance a week ago, focusing on the house where she was shot and its property. The home was owned by Bloomer, an independent contractor who delivers the Duluth News Tribune.
Hill was reported missing by her mother two days after her 22nd birthday. Family said Bloomer had been dating Hill at the time she disappeared.
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Post by LadyBlue on Jul 24, 2004 14:01:53 GMT -5
The body of a 47-year-old woman who was last seen on Wednesday was found near her burned-out car, according to the Lincoln County Sheriff's Department.
Linda S. Szulczewski, of Merrill, was reported missing Friday.
Authorities were not ruling out homicide, but there was no evidence of foul play, communications officer Mike Caylor said.
An ATV rider found a burned-out car about 6 p.m. Friday in the Harrison Hills area and called the sheriff's department.
Szulczewski's body was found about 100 feet from the car, Szulczewski's 1993 Ford Escort. There were no signs of trauma on the body.
Caylor said investigators were waiting for toxicology reports to determine the cause of death. Authorities took Szulczewski's body to Madison Saturday for an autopsy.
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Post by LadyBlue on Jul 29, 2004 15:43:41 GMT -5
In order to save some space I'm going to place some of those who have been headlined and found into their proper placesMay 16, 2004 BRAINERD, Minn. - Searchers have found a body they believe is that of Erika Dalquist, a Brainerd woman last seen a year and a half ago, a private investigator involved in the search said Sunday. Police called a news conference for 2 p.m. Sunday to announce what they called ``a significant development'' in the Dalquist case. Police Chief John Bolduc declined to give details ahead of the news conference. But Bob Heales, a private investigator, said searchers found a body about 8 p.m. Saturday that they believe is Dalquist. He said the clothing on the body was the same as Dalquist was wearing when she was last seen leaving a bar in downtown Brainerd Oct. 30, 2002. Heales said the body was found about seven miles east of Brainerd, near where a suspect in the case grew up. Erika DalquistHe said a neighbor found the body off a trail while looking for a bloodhound that had bolted away during the search Saturday evening. He said the bloodhound wasn't found until early Sunday, next to the spot where the body was found. Dalquist's mother, Colleen Dalquist, said police had asked her not to comment before the news conference. Heales, who helped lead the search for missing University of North Dakota student Dru Sjodin, said he and Sjodin's father, Allan, were among the searchers out Saturday evening. www.startribune.com/stories/462/4778940.html
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Post by LadyBlue on Jul 29, 2004 15:44:50 GMT -5
Heales said a neighbor found the body off a trail about seven miles east of Brainerd while looking for a bloodhound that had bolted away during the search. ``I felt a change in the wind, she threw her head up like she caught a scent. And she was gone,'' said Denny Adams of Conde, S.D., owner of the bloodhound, who's named Calamity Jane. Heales said the bloodhound was found early Sunday lying next to Dalquist's remains, which were still at the scene, a heavily wooded area bisected by logging trails. Myears' grandparents were cooperative with the search party Saturday evening, but the grandfather was arrested Sunday morning when he used farm equipment to spray a squad car with manure, Klang said. The sheriff said the suspect's grandparents own a large amount of farmland, and investigators were still combing the area for evidence Sunday. The body was found near the grandparents' home, authorities said. www.cbs2.com/national/BodyFound-aa/resources%5fnews%5fhtml******************************************** Dog's handler knew something was up when Calamity Jane bolted BRAINERD, Minn. - When his bloodhound Calamity Jane bolted during the search for Erika Dalquist, handler Denny Adams had no idea where she went, but he knew something was up. Adams said Sunday that Calamity Jane was used to working off leash and it was "absolutely not" normal for her to take off. "Calamity will be 11 years old. She knows what she's doing. We've had her in Africa, we've had her on many other searches, and she's never done this," Adams said. The bloodhound's unusual behavior resulted in the discovery of human remains that proved to be those of Dalquist, who had been missing since Oct. 30, 2002. As searchers were scouring the woods for Calamity Jane on foot, horseback and four-wheelers, a man from a ranch near the search site found the remains about an hour after the dog disappeared, Adams said. Adams and private investigator Bob Heales were among a small group of searchers called over to the site. "I've been doing this long enough and I recognized these were human remains. We backed off and I said, 'We have a crime scene,'" Adams said. Heales called authorities and officers came out and took control of the area. Adams, of Conde, S.D., said he and two others resumed their search for the dog until Crow Wing County deputies called him around 4 a.m. Sunday from the site where the remains were found to tell him, "Your bloodhound is at the scene. She came right back to it," he recounted. "She was awful cold and wet. They were kind enough to put her in their patrol car and warm her up," Adams said. "As a result of all of this, it led to the discovery of Erika." Calamity Jane was one of three bloodhounds being used in the search Saturday. "I think the dogs were a huge tool," Heales said. "We all knew it was going to take some luck." Adams, interviewed by phone as he headed back to South Dakota, said Calamity Jane was doing fine. "She's great. She's been sleeping since she got in the truck. So I'll take her home and boil her a chicken, take all the bones out, and she can have her feast." www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthsuperior/8682983.htm
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Post by LadyBlue on Jul 29, 2004 16:44:42 GMT -5
Julie Holmquist, was just 16, she was an avid In-line skater, she was full of life, heck she was life, fresh and new, an actual Earth Angel wanting only the simple things out of life, but she had goals. She loved her family, she worked hard, she was obtaining a good education and her passion for skating couldn't be denied.
Julie knew what she had to do to accomplish her goals, that it would be hard, to gain strength in her body, in order to be strong enough to play Volleyball so she could obtain a scholarship, for a College education, that she could not afford otherwise and she was disciplined to work even harder, everyday. Everyday, after school she worked two jobs, she didn't even bother messing around with dating boys yet, she was still a sophomore in high school.
Each day usually about dusk, she would make sure and get time in for her In-line skating, Julie would dash into the house she shared with her Mom, Julie being the youngest of three girls, she was her Mom's pride and joy.
Julie quickly changed her clothes, quickly lacing her well fitted and broken in rollerblades onto her feet, she grabbed her Walkman, favorite tape and without a care in the world, she went out the front door, yelling back, "Bye Mom, I love you, I will do those dishes when I get back." Her Mom heard the screen-door slam and Julie was gone. Julie rapidly took off rollerblading her normal skating route, north up highway 1, just about 8:00pm.
One would often find her waving to familiar people, and in a small town like Hallock, everyone knew most all the folks and they were aware of what Julie's goals were, Julie skating through town was like part of the scenery, it was welcomed and common to see Julie every day, rollerblading with all of her passions showing in her young innocent face, often lingering on through the day from her extreme kindness and radiant smile.
The local sheriff was making his rounds and just after the sheriff had seen her and she waved acknowledging him, was the last time anyone saw Julie, alive. Sometime approximately 8:30pm, Julie vanished. There was no evidence of abduction, there was no evidence of an accident, there was nothing, no signs of Julie at all, she had just vanished.
This case is being Investigated by the combination of three Law Enforcement Agencies that were called in because of the fact that they are so close to the Canadian border and the fact that Julie was so young, and to set up their command posts, that they needed to establish communications between the necessary sources. Intense searches and questions were asked to everyone that the FBI thought just might have seen something, anything, yet no one saw a thing, nothing.
There were numerous volunteer searches from several parties, the authorities called in the National Guard for Ground Searches, and the Dogs who were especially trained to sniff out vital details, that the human nose simply cannot detect, were used and the dogs started out with gusto and continued on the scent all the way until about 7-8 miles outside of town, when the dogs suddenly stopped in their tracks and still on County Route 1, from that point on, nothing, Julie one of Hallock, Minnesota's youngest children of God was mysteriously gone.
The frantic search for Julie took everyone to a new plateau of fear, adopting new and even more bizarre beliefs and even more curious behavior, overprotecting areas that the 1,500 residents of Hallock, Minnesota ever thought that they would have to endure in their lives. They all learned to draw off of God, and themselves and things that required a new found inner-strength, as well and knowing that every minute counted in the safe return of Julie, it didn't matter WHO's child was gone, it was a Child, that is all that mattered.
So people volunteered their time, they took shifts for hours, then days, soon becoming weeks, they did ground searches, Arial searches and door-to-door, nothing
The local newspaper stated, " A Hunter scouting the area for the upcoming bear season found Julie's remains in a remote area 12 miles from where she was last seen. Apparently unsure of his discovery, he summoned his uncle to the site. Holmquist body, her skates still on was found in a shallow pond about 100 yards off a dirt road.
The roads entrance is protected by barbed-wire fencing and the pond is nestled between a forest and open meadow, it is hard to see unless you know its there. He and others believe that someone with local knowledge might have put the body there because the pond isn't something a person driving by would notice." There are no suspects at this time but they are following up on new and old leads every day and have some people under an umbrella of suspicion."
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Post by LadyBlue on Jul 29, 2004 16:45:20 GMT -5
Who killed Julie? Why did this person/s,have to kill her, to hide something else? No one knows exactly what happened to Julie, everyone has their ideas, their theories, yet the killer/s are still out there.
And who ever you are, be assured that the authorities do have their suspects, it is just a matter of time, the proof needs to be set before them, it must be good solid evidence, evidence when presented would have no trouble convincing a Jury.
There has to be a why, a how and a where and reasons for yanking a precious Angel out of her normal existence, the results of one selfish decision, which has indeed brought tragedy but the family who knows that Julie would want to have the killer/s punished for their crimes, but also to possibly be forgiven as well, she would want what God decides.
Julie was a devoted member of her church and to her Mother, who she escorted to Church every Sunday morning. "She will be missed, greatly," the Minster states, and "She was loved by all that knew her and one's who didn't know her well, that she is with God, so she is safe and in no pain."
The family doesn't feel as if Julie has actually settled with this "sudden death" of her body, they feel as if her soul is still not a rest, there needs to be closure and let Julie's soul move on to her destination, of peace and tranquility.
This is why Julie's Aunt sought me out personally, her friend said, "I don't know why I know this but here is someone that I have heard of that may be able to help you, she is CBPIWisdom," "She just might possibly find the answers needed to the questions that still linger in the air."
The family just wants help to bring the killer's identity out in the open and prove the injustice, so that Julie's body can find it's resting place in between peace and tranquility.
Indeed this has definitely brought a new outlook on the lives of everyone concerned, some say that with tragedy brings new light and brings families closer, with the hope of bright new things growing from this and finding the answers that the Law Enforcement officials need. Since there was no evidence, no weapon, nothing to go on, they have come a long way by process of elimination but the killer is still out there, on the lose, able to do this again, to someone else's child.
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Post by LadyBlue on Jul 29, 2004 16:46:53 GMT -5
Kittson County Sheriff Ray Hunt says a weekend search by soldiers from the Minnesota National Guard didn't turn up anything significant.
The troops were looking for clues in the slaying of 16-year-old Julie Holmquist of Hallock.
Hunt says they searched a 200-acre area of trees and grassland near where the girl's body was found in August. He says they weren't looking for anything in particular, just anything they thought might be significant.
The sheriff says the soldiers did pick up some items. He won't say what they were, but he doubts they have anything to do with Holmquist's death.
The items will be sent to the state crime lab for analysis. ******************************************** Ramsey County officials today are expected to release results of an autopsy performed on the body of a Hallock teen, reports WCCO-TV.
Meanwhile, a man whose properties were searched in the Julie Holmquist case denies involvement in the disappearance and death of the girl, a report said today.
The 45-year-old man, who lives in a Minneapolis apartment and has another home near Hallock, said he feels like he is being set up by FBI agents, reports The Associated Press.
"I was cooperating with them at first," he told the Star Tribune. "Now I'm going to have to get a lawyer. I didn't think I needed a lawyer."
Authorities have been tight-lipped about their investigation and what evidence, if any, they have, the wire service said. Kittson County Sheriff Ray Hunt reiterated Sunday night for AP that investigators continue to interview many people and are not close to making an arrest.
Holmquist, 16, vanished July 29 while in-line skating on a highway outside of Hallock in northwestern Minnesota. A hunter scouting an area found her body Thursday in a shallow pond in a rural area near Lancaster. Her skates were still on, and investigators have said the appearance of her clothes indicated she might have been sexually assaulted, reports the wire service.
Officials have not said whether they have determined how Holmquist died.
Agents from the FBI and the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension searched the 45-year-old man's Minneapolis apartment and his Lancaster home Friday, said AP. The man said it was the second time in about two weeks that his apartment has been searched.
The FBI also gave him a lie-detector test before Holmquist's body was found, he told the wire service. He said agents didn't inform him of the results, and he didn't reveal the nature of the questioning.
The man also acknowledged to AP that the search of his home in Lancaster. "I'm going to have to get a priest now and bless it because they've been in it," he said.
The man said he left Minneapolis in June with $500 and groceries to go to the home in Lancaster to "patch up some walls," AP reported.
Shortly afterward, a female friend and several children moved in, according to the wire service. At some point, she left with two of the younger children, and two of the older ones stayed with him.
He said he left Lancaster shortly after Holmquist was reported missing because he had to return to Minneapolis to arrange a dental appointment, according to AP. He also said he was out of money and food. It was unclear where the two older children went.
When asked what he did for a living, he reportedly said: "Nothing."
Police records reviewed by WCCO-TV show he has two prior criminal convictions in Minnesota: A Burnsville robbery incident in 1976 and a 1995 burglary in Kittson County. Minneapolis police have arrested him for threatening his girlfriend and for several minor offenses, said AP.
The man told AP that investigators "don't want to listen to my alibi," but only wanted him to talk about when he traveled between Minneapolis and Lancaster. He didn't offer specifics about his whereabouts the day Holmquist disappeared.
"I was just in the wrong place at the wrong time," he told the wire service. "... But I bet you hear that all the time."
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Post by LadyBlue on Jul 29, 2004 16:48:13 GMT -5
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Post by LadyBlue on Sept 10, 2004 16:45:50 GMT -5
The human remains found north of Duluth last week have been identified as those of a 25-year-old kidnap victim, Travis Joseph Holappa, of Embarrass, Minn., the St. Louis County Sheriff's Office said Thursday.
Holappa had been missing since late July, when he was kidnapped from a street in Gilbert. The medical examiner said the cause and manner of his death are still under investigation.
Three men have been arrested in connection with Holappa's disappearance. Frank Alan Miller, 29, of Ely, and Jason Anderson, 28, of Eveleth, were arrested and charged with kidnapping. The name of the third suspect, arrested last week, was not immediately released.
According to the criminal complaint, Holappa owed Miller a $14,000 drug debt.
Miller and Anderson are accused of forcing him into a blue early-1990s Cadillac. The complaint said the men switched cars and drove Holappa to a house in the Makinen area. They beat him severely and put him in the car's trunk, where he remained for several hours, the complaint said.
Authorities found the car with duct tape, a belt and what appeared to be a large quantity of blood, according to the complaint.
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Post by LadyBlue on Nov 12, 2004 9:23:24 GMT -5
Authorities seemed to find 16-month-old Ella Thompson almost by chance.
Agents were on their way to question a friend of the girl's mother when they happened upon the toddler and her mom at a nearby gas station parking lot in Fridley.
Twenty-three-year-old Sara Fay Peterson was arrested on a felony charge of depriving another of custodial rights. The little girl is doing fine and was placed in the care of Wabasha County social services.
Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension Superintendent Linda Finney says it's a relief to know the child is safe.
The search continues for the girl's father, Dana Thompson, who also has been charged in the case.
Peterson is accused of taking Ella from the girl's grandmother -- who is her court-appointed guardian -- on Friday. An Amber Alert was originally issued in the case, but was later canceled.
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Post by LadyBlue on Nov 29, 2004 4:08:11 GMT -5
The mother of a Minneapolis girl who was the subject of an Amber Alert is happy to have her home safe.
Investigators found 13-year-old Katheryn Deverney and her suspected abductor in a South St. Paul home late Friday and arrested him without incident.
Twenty-eight-year-old Luis Pallares-Villasana (loo-EES' pal-LAR'-ays veel-luh-SAH'-nuh) remains jailed pending charges.
The girl's mother, Shannon Phelps, says the man pulled himself up to her daughter's second-floor window by grabbing onto a drain pipe. She says he then grabbed the girl and pulled her to the window, and they both fell.
Though Phelps and her husband were awake, they heard nothing.
She says her daughter is fine physically and was very happy to see her mother and return home.
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Post by LadyBlue on Mar 13, 2005 15:03:35 GMT -5
Saint Paul Police say the body found in an apartment Saturday is that of Memory Pachowicz, the 33-year-old mother who disappeared earlier in the week. Officials said the body was found in an abandoned apartment in the neighborhood of 5th Street East and Mendota Streets. While offering few details, the officials did say there were signs of a struggle. Memory Pachowicz disappeared early Sunday morning. According to St. Paul police Pachowicz’s friends walked her out to her car early Sunday morning. Pachowicz received a call on her cell phone at 1 a.m. Sunday, and since then that phone hadn’t been used and Memory hadn’t been seen or heard from. The last time Pachowicz was seen she was wearing a pink zip-up sweater with white stripes on the sleeves, blue jeans and white tennis shoes. She has a tattoo of a rose bracelet on her wrist. www.kare11.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=76729
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Post by LadyBlue on Sept 27, 2005 11:01:25 GMT -5
Authorities found the body of missing Minnesota State University - Moorhead student Patrick Kycia in the Red River in the northern part of Moorhead, Minn. Tuesday morning. Police confirm the body is that of Kycia, 19, of Stillwater, Minn. River rescue teams searching the area found Kycia's body around 9 a.m. near the intersection of 11th and Seventh Streets in Moorhead. River rescue teams were searching the area because a shoe was found Monday night that matched the description of the shoes Kycia was wearing Thursday night. Kycia's body was found three blocks from where that shoe was found. Kycia's body will be sent to the Ramsey County Medical Examiner for an autopsy to determin the cause of death. Kycia was last seen early Friday at a fraternity party. One of Kycia's friends, Ricky Sayarath, said Kycia drank a lot of whiskey at a Phi Sigma Kappa house party Thursday night. "Guys just kept giving him shots," said Sayarath, who was at the party. "He must have been pretty drunk." Kycia's wallet -- with cash and bank cards still in it -- was found about three blocks south of the frat house. Two brief calls were made from Kycia's cell phone, but there was no talking. Family and friends began to worry when Kycia missed a philosophy test and missed his 5 p.m. Friday shift for delivering pizzas. Kycia's father, Julian Kycia, and his mother, Rose Foley, said that was out of character. "He doesn't miss classes and he doesn't miss work," Julian Kycia said. wcco.com/topstories/local_story_270104812.html
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