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HISTORICAL TRUE CRIME

Kenneth Jr., David and Daniel Klein were youngsters who vanished in 1951, launching a mystery that remains unsolved despite renewed attention.
On the 50th anniversary of Milda McQuillan's disappearance, her granddaughters visit the area where she was last seen in the Minnesota woods.
In the epilogue column to his Minnesota Vice series, Jeremy Fugleberg describes his hunt for Casey Ramirez, who he found, and what the saga says about 1980s Princeton—and the rest of us, now.
Fabled leap more myth than fact, but still an entertaining story, historian says

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Latest Headlines
In part 7 of Minnesota Vice series — An unimpressed judge, a cash bag dusted with cocaine, flipped drug smugglers, an acquittal and a verdict
In part 6 of the Minnesota Vice series — A surprise offer, someone refuses to flip, a plane spills secrets, a task force turns the screws, someone agrees to squeal, and the big day finally arrives
In part 5 of the Minnesota Vice — a last good day, a chase, a rescue, screams of joy and so, so much evidence
In part 4 of the Minnesota Vice series — The I-Team scrambles, a journalist makes a strange trip to Mexico, a bombshell report airs, and Casey turns to public ridicule and defiance
Beatrice Johnke stood accused of poisoning her husband, Louis, in Great Depression South St. Paul. The scandalous trial revealed a sordid love affair and plenty of unanswered questions.
Arthur Kasherman was a gadfly journalist and a sometimes extortionist in 1945 Minneapolis. His murder helped make reformist Hubert Humphrey a rising star in politics.

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From Deadwood, South Dakota, to Bottineau, North Dakota, and east to Duluth and St. Paul, opium lured many toward illicit profits and harmful addictions.
Danny Hogan, proprietor of St. Paul's Green Lantern Saloon, a legendary criminal hangout, saw himself as the peacemaker between gangsters and corrupt cops. In December 1928, it was the death of him.
Current occupants of former Security National Bank and Trust in South Dakota reflect on notorious crime

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