Who killed Laura Lynn
DeMeules?
by Sid Pranke
Cliff
Montanye Sr. runs an excavating business from his rural home outside
of Northfield, Minn. The hard gravel road off Cty. Rd. 46 that leads
to his home stretches for about a half mile, and is clearly marked
with a “Dead End” sign. He plows the road himself after
it snows, though technically it’s not his responsibility.
But because the road also doubles as a township boundary line, he
said it’s easier to do it himself rather than wait for local
government bodies to argue over who’s going to plow the road.
The road also lies about a mile off the I-35
North and Highway 19 junction; the Montanye farmhouse’s east
property line is the west “fence” of the freeway, and
because it’s a dead end, no vehicle can get back to the freeway,
or any other road to anywhere, if it heads down “my driveway,”
as Montanye calls it.
In early November, Montanye received about 140
phone messages on his machine over a two-day period. “I erased
all of them,” he said. The calls primarily were from Twin
Cities media, wanting to talk to him. “I don’t know
where they got my number,” he said. Some media personnel pounded
on his door as well; others approached his wife in her vehicle.
He told her to “just roll up your window” so she wouldn’t
have to talk to them. He eventually called back the area newspaper,
the Northfield News, but they said “it was over” and
didn’t want to talk to him any more,” Montanye said.
What was over? The initial media shockwave surrounding
Montanye’s discovery of a female body in a ditch near his
home.
On Sunday, Nov. 6, at about 4:15 p.m., Montanye
was riding down the gravel road on the huge tractor that is essential
to his business. On the north side of the road, about 250 feet in
from the adjacent county road, he saw a body. He could see the body
amid the sumac and the brush because his rig stood about nine feet
high; if he had been driving a regular truck, he would have seen
nothing unusual. He immediately called the local authorities, who
rushed in and sealed off the area for about 20 hours.
Montanye
later found out that his closest neighbors had seen bright headlights
shine through their windows around 4 a.m. on Nov. 6, ostensibly
coming from a vehicle turning around on the road, and the resulting
tire tracks near where the woman’s body was found seemed to
bear that out. Montanye and his neighbor think it was the killer’s
vehicle, though investigators aren’t entirely convinced. Montanye
said he was relieved that he was the one to find the woman’s
body, and not his grandkids, who were go-carting up and down the
road just prior to the time when he spotted her body.
Montanye has his own personal theories about
the incident. He thinks it was done by “someone who knows
the area,” because the body seemed to him to be carefully
placed, with no signs of panic by the murderer, since no brush was
disturbed, except where the assailant walked off the road.
Investigators on the case differ with Montanye,
saying that it appears to them the body was just dropped, not carefully
placed, indicating a certain level of panic, and they think the
killer(s) was looking for a quick, secluded spot to get rid of the
woman’s body.
Who was the dead woman lying naked in the brush?
And who put her there?
Lisa DeMeules was dozing near the television at her suburban Blaine
home very early on Monday morning, Nov. 7. Footage from a local
news report—first showing an overhead helicopter, then a ditch—caught
her attention. The report mentioned that an unidentified woman with
short blonde hair was found dead in a ditch, and gave a number to
call if anyone might know who she was.
Lisa had a premonition that the woman was her
younger sister Laura Lynn, even though the woman’s body had
been found near Northfield, away from South Minneapolis, where Laura
was thought to be still visiting. Laura had a rough past, including
theft and prostitution charges, but had entered treatment programs
for her drug problems and had kept a clean record for several years.
Nevertheless, Lisa was worried.
Lisa called her mom, Marlene DeMeules, and told
her she thought the dead woman was Laura, and asked her mom to call
the number because she was too scared to do it herself.
Nobody had heard from Laura for several days;
Lisa had received a phone message from her on her machine on Nov.
2. Marlene had driven into Minneapolis, where Laura was staying
with her oldest boy, Tommy, and the boy’s father that same
night to bring her some money. Later it was learned that Laura had
stopped by her son’s home again on Nov. 3, to get a change
of clothes.
On Nov. 7 in the evening, Marlene called the number, and gave a
description of her daughter, including identifiable marks like piercings,
and the operators said they had to check on those details and call
her back. So Marlene thought she had some hope, that it wasn’t
her 33-year-old daughter that had been murdered and left in the
ditch. But unfortunately, it turned out that it was Laura Lynn.
Not long after hearing confirmation that her
daughter was dead, Marlene suffered a heart attack, and was taken
by ambulance to Mercy Hospital in Coon Rapids. “I thought
it was just a panic attack, but I had this pain along my jaw and
down my arm, and they said it was a heart attack,” Marlene
said. Marlene is now out of the hospital, recovering from her heart
attack, but the deep grief over the loss of her daughter stays with
her. And she said two questions continue to plague her regarding
her daughter’s murder. “Why did somebody do this? And
how much did she suffer?” she asks.
When she last saw her daughter on the night of
Nov. 2, Marlene said “she seemed OK,” was enjoying her
time with her oldest son, 16-year-old Tommy (Laura was very young
when she gave birth to him), and mentioned her mom’s birthday
coming up on Nov. 9, and that she wanted to help her mom celebrate
it. That was never to happen.
Family
members say Laura was a woman full of life with a great sense of
humor who loved her three kids. Shortly after her murder, Laura’s
cousin Trish Douglas said that Laura was really trying. “She
finally decided ‘I gotta get my life together. I wanna live.
I wanna be a good person.’ ”
Laura’s family members said they were upset
by some media reports that ignored or didn’t bother to find
out more about Laura as a person and her concerted efforts over
the past several years to turn her life around for the better. Instead,
some reports only concentrated on her life on the streets, and the
past trouble she had with the law.
Rural Northfield witness Montanye was immediately
sensitive to the family’s concerns, even before he knew who
they were. He was reluctant to speak to any media initially, out
of respect for the family, since at the time no one yet knew it
was Laura in the ditch. Even when Pulse recently contacted him,
his wife wanted to make sure we had really spoken to the family,
asking us to verify the color of the business card that Marlene
DeMeules had showed us earlier, saying to tell him she had said
it was OK for us to call him.
In a discussion with Laura’s sister Lisa
and her mom, Marlene, they expressed anger and frustration over
the quality of Laura’s help from county workers at a crucial
point in her recovery. “The system failed Laura,” her
sister Lisa said.
Laura grew up in South Minneapolis, attended public schools in the
neighborhood, and had a rough time for her 33 years. She was married
for a short time but it was an abusive relationship; had been a
rape and assault victim; turned to prostitution to support her drug
habits; and had been in and out of several treatment programs. Her
last arrest was in the summer of 2003, according to Minneapolis
Police arrest records.
Last May, Laura’s county worker had arranged
for her to live at an apartment at 19th Street and Chicago Avenue,
though the neighborhood surrounding that location was known for
drugs and criminal activity, things Laura was trying to avoid. Laura
was to have an independent living arrangement, with county workers
checking in on her routinely. Lisa said when Laura got to the house,
she freaked out. “She got scared to death. They put her in
the middle of Minneapolis, where she had been beaten, where she
had been raped, where she had gotten into trouble.” And Laura
had looked out the window to the alley where she saw drug activity
going on. That was it. She ran.
After that, Laura lived here and there for a
month or so, and then moved out to Blaine with Lisa and her family
in early July for a short time, and then to her father Duane’s
home up until just a week before her murder.
The Investigation
Sgt. Dave Stensrud has worked for the Rice County
Sheriff’s office for 25 years and is the supervisor of the
investigations division for the office. Larger towns in Rice County
include Faribault, with about 21,000 people, and Northfield, with
about 18,000 people. Stensrud described what happened at the crime
scene after Montanye called them from his cell phone. “Our
deputies secured the area, and we did a ground search,” he
said. “We called the BCA [Bureau of Criminal Apprehension
in St. Paul] to assist with the collection of forensic evidence,
and evidence was gathered.”
Laura’s body was then taken to the Ramsey
County Medical Examiner’s office, where an autopsy was performed.
The official cause of death is listed as “multiple traumatic
injuries due to an assault.” About 1,000 collective hours
have been spent trying to solve this case, Stensrud estimated, and
he said it probably will take many more hours before the case is
resolved.
The BCA is still working on forensic evidence
in the case, according to Senior Special Agent Robert Berg, and
is expected to be completed within a few weeks, although those results
will not be released as public information. Laura’s family
members expressed frustration over how long it is taking to complete
the forensics work, saying that they were told by the sheriff’s
office that they would hear from investigators by the first of the
year. That has not happened, said Lisa DeMeules. Agent Berg said
the time spent on forensic work is necessary to help solve the case.
And it is a difficult case to solve, according
to Stensrud, partly because of Laura’s less-than-predictable
behavior and checkered past. “We don’t believe she was
murdered in Rice County,” Stensrud said. But because her body
was found in that county, that’s where the investigation is
centered, though Laura was last seen leaving a house near 21st Avenue
and Lake Street at around 3 or 3:30 a.m. on Nov. 6. So far, there
are no official suspects in the case, although Stensrud said, “We
have a person of significant interest.”
Rice County authorities said Laura Lynn had cocaine
and marijuana in her system at the time of her murder, leading them
to believe that she may have been partying with her assailant(s).
“Unfortunately, with that lifestyle, there’s a lot of
predators,” Sgt. Stensrud said. There is reason to believe
that Laura may have been acquainted with her killer(s), he said,
and that there is no evidence to suggest a serial killing.
BCA Agent Berg said he believes the public is
not in any danger because the case has not yet been solved, “not
unless you’re involved with high-risk behavior. Obviously,
if this person is willing to kill someone else,” there is
a possibility of danger to others, Berg said.
Montanye told Marlene DeMeules that he didn’t
sleep for a week after finding Laura Lynn’s body. “It’s
hard to take anytime, knowing that someone could do that to somebody.”
A rally/vigil was held in Laura’s memory
on Nov. 16—an evening march down a section of Lake Street
known to be a tough neighborhood—the same neighborhood where
Laura was last seen. The 50 or so people who attended marched down
Lake Street from the Heart of the Beast Puppet Theater building
at 15th and Lake to the Midtown YWCA at 22nd and Lake Street. Ward
9 Councilmember Gary Schiff’s office played a major role in
organizing the event. Other organizers of the rally included the
East Phillips Improvement Coalition, PRIDE Program; the Longfellow
Community Council; and Tubman Family Violence, among others. Councilmember
Schiff said the rally called for “an end of the victimization
of women,” and to advance “the empowerment of women
and girls.” He said Laura’s tragic death is a wake-up
call for Minneapolis to develop successful models of treatment options
for women with drug problems or criminal histories, including prostitution.
He thinks treatment centers and self-sufficiency
programs should be located in more rural areas, such as the Volunteers
of America program, located in Shoreview, to help people avoid inner-city
temptations and dangers while they recover. He said he believes
programs like this are underfunded, and that should be changed.
He will work toward that end in Minneapolis by arranging a tour
of model treatment programs, and working with the legislature on
these issues. He also wants “to make sure we recognize all
victims of violence, whether it’s a prostitute or a gang member
… so we don’t perpetuate a belief that anyone is expendable.”
Laura’s family has received a few of her
belongings, including a beaded necklace, a silver ring and a belly
ring. Laura had three children—Tommy, 16, who lives with his
dad; David, 14, who lives with an aunt, and Jerome, 4, who is in
the process of being adopted by a friend of the family.
One of Laura’s younger sisters, Sheila,
said the two were inseparable when they were younger. “I couldn’t
leave her side,” she said. Sheila said she admired Laura because
“even through everything she had been through in her life,
she still held her head up high. And if someone was hurting, she
would have done anything to help you.”
Family friend Lisa Goenner said that Laura may
have not lived a perfect life, but “to be found like that
just thrown there like she was garbage. It’s just so wrong.”
Laura’s sister Lisa said she thinks Laura “was savable,”
and that it’s a tragedy that didn’t happen for her.
Laura was last known to be wearing blue jeans,
a multi-colored striped shirt, white tennis shoes, and a mid- to
long-length black leather jacket. She was also carrying a brown-
or maroon-colored large purse or carrying pack with a strap.
If anyone has information on the DeMeules homicide,
please call the Rice County Sheriff’s office crime tip line
at 866-968-8477, or the BCA at 651-793-7000.
The Family’s Letter
On behalf of the DeMeules family … “Our
daughter and sister, Laura DeMeules, was killed in Minneapolis and
was left in a ditch in Northfield, Minnesota on November 6, 2005.
She was only 33 years old.
She leaves 3 sons behind. Laura had a hard life,
and for the last 3 years prior to her death, she went through many
programs to better herself and improve her life and the life of
her sons. She dedicated herself to these 3 years only to end in
this tragedy.
The family is asking you to find it in your heart
to make a donation for left over funeral costs that have incurred
and to make it possible to make a headstone for Laura, which the
family feels Laura deserves through all the efforts she had made.
Any remaining funds would then be put into another fund for her
children.
Your help is so greatly appreciated. If you wish to donate, please
make your checks to:
Laura DeMeules Memorial Fund
Bank of the West
10930 Club West Parkway NE
Blaine, Minnesota 55449
Thank you so much for your consideration!
Sincerely, The DeMeules family” |