Murder of Dru Sjodin

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Murder of Dru Sjodin
Dru Sjodin.jpg
Dru Sjodin before her murder
Location Grand Forks, North Dakota, U.S.
Pequot Lakes, Minnesota, U.S.
DateNovember 22, 2003
Attack type
Murder, sexual assault, beating, stabbing, kidnapping
VictimDru Sjodin
PerpetratorAlfonso Rodriguez Jr.
MotiveSexual
Verdict Guilty
Convictions Kidnapping resulting in death
Sentence

The murder of Dru Sjodin, a 22-year-old student at the University of North Dakota and Gamma Phi Beta sorority member, occurred on November 22, 2003. Sjodin, was kidnapped by Alfonso Rodriguez Jr. from the Columbia Mall parking lot in Grand Forks, North Dakota. [1] Rodriguez Jr. took Sjodin to the North Dakota and Minnesota state lines, where he murdered her and left her body in Crookston, Minnesota.

Contents

In August 2006, Rodriguez Jr. was found guilty of kidnapping resulting in death of Dru Sjodin in a federal court. Rodriguez Jr. was sentenced to death, however, his death sentence was appealed and he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Her disappearance and murder attracted national attention, and generated extensive media coverage. Sjodin's murder prompted the creation of the Dru Sjodin National Sex Offender Public Registry, an unprecedented public safety resource that provides the public with access to sex offender data nationwide.

Murder

At 4:00 p.m. on Saturday, November 22, 2003, Dru Katrina Sjodin (born September 26, 1981) finished her shift at the Victoria's Secret store located in the Columbia Mall in Grand Forks, North Dakota. [2] After shopping for and purchasing a new purse from Marshall Field's, Sjodin left the mall and began walking to her 1994 Oldsmobile Cutlass. [3] During this time, Sjodin was speaking with her boyfriend, Chris Lang, on her cell phone. Four minutes into their conversation, Lang reports Sjodin was saying "Okay, okay," before the call abruptly ended. [4] Lang suspected that the call was just dropped and because Sjodin didn't give any sense of urgency, Lang thought nothing of it. [5] About three hours later, Lang received another call from her cell phone, but heard only static and the sound of buttons being pressed. [2] It was reported by authorities this second phone call originated somewhere near Fisher, Minnesota, [6] but that has remained unsubstantiated. With this second call and Sjodin not showing up at her other job at the El Roco nightclub, there was concern for her whereabouts. [7] A week later, on December 1, a suspect, 50-year-old registered level-3 sex offender Alfonso Rodriguez Jr. (born February 18, 1953), [8] was arrested in connection with Sjodin's disappearance. [2]

Perpetrator

Alfonso Rodriguez Jr.
Alfonso Rodriguez Jr.jpg
Rodriguez, in 2000
Born (1953-02-18) February 18, 1953 (age 71)
Criminal status Incarcerated
Conviction(s) Kidnapping resulting in death (18 U.S.C. § 1201)
Criminal penalty Death; commuted to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole
Imprisoned at United States Penitentiary, Coleman [9]

Alfonso Rodriguez Jr. was the son of migrant farm workers Dolores and Alfonso Rodriguez Sr., who traveled between Crystal City, Texas, and Minnesota and then decided to settle in 1963 in Crookston, Minnesota. He admitted to using many drugs during his youth and committed his first sexual assault with a knife when he was 21 by attempting to rape a woman he asked to give him a ride home. [10]

Rodriguez had been released from prison May 1, 2003, after serving a 23-year prison term for rape, aggravated assault and kidnapping a woman. Rodriguez had also previously pleaded guilty to rape and was convicted multiple times for rape. He had a long criminal record that included repeated sexual assaults against women. He was released as a Minnesota Level 3 sex offender which meant he was highly likely to reoffend. [11]

Police investigation

Police reports indicate that Rodriguez claimed to have been near Columbia Mall on the evening of Sjodin's disappearance, reportedly watching Once Upon a Time in Mexico at the Columbia Mall Cinema 4. This claim was disproven as the film was not screening at that cinema or any other local theater at the time. [12] Further investigations revealed receipts from Rodriguez's purchases at various stores around the mall, including one from a nearby Menards store for a knife. Notably, Rodriguez possessed two specific tool kit knives available only at a certain home center store located approximately a mile from the mall. These knives, however, were not purchased on the day Sjodin vanished, and their exact purchase date remains unknown. In Rodriguez's car, police found one of these tool kit knives submerged in a cleaning solution in the rear wheel well. Additionally, a woman's shoe and another knife with blood matching Sjodin's DNA were discovered in the vehicle. [2]

Sjodin's body was recovered on April 17, 2004, just west of Crookston, Minnesota, when deep snow drifts began to melt. [13] [14] Crookston is also where Rodriguez lived with his mother. [15] Sjodin's body was found partially nude and face down in a ravine. [16] [17] Her hands were tied behind her back; she had been beaten, stabbed, and sexually assaulted, and had several lacerations including a five-and-a-half inch cut on her neck. A rope was also tied around her neck and remnants of a shopping bag were found under the rope, suggesting that a bag had been placed on her head. The medical examiner concluded that she had either died as a result of the major neck wound, from suffocation, or from exposure to the elements. Thousands of people had helped search for Sjodin, and hundreds attended her funeral. [6]

Trial and sentencing

Because Sjodin had been taken across state lines, the crime became a federal case under the Federal Kidnapping Act. [17] [18] This meant that Rodriguez was eligible to receive the death penalty if convicted, a possibility not allowed under North Dakota or Minnesota law, as neither state has the death penalty. It was the first death penalty case in a century to take place in North Dakota. [19] U.S. Attorney Drew Wrigley and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Keith Reisenauer and Norman Anderson prosecuted the case against Rodriguez. On August 30, 2006, Rodriguez was convicted in federal court of kidnapping resulting in death for the murder of Dru Sjodin, and on September 22, 2006, the jury recommended that he receive the death penalty. [20] On February 8, 2007, Rodriguez was formally sentenced to death by U.S District Judge Ralph R. Erickson. [21] He is imprisoned at the United States Penitentiary, Coleman in Florida. [9] Judge Erickson arranged that Rodriguez would be executed in South Dakota. [22]

In October 2011, defense attorneys filed a federal habeas corpus motion claiming that Rodriguez is mentally disabled. [23] On June 28, 2013, Rodriguez admitted his guilt in a death row interview with Dr. Michael Welner.

Appeals

In 2021, the same judge who sentenced Rodriguez to death, Ralph R. Erickson, now a judge for the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, overturned his sentence and ordered that a new sentencing phase be conducted due to "misleading testimony from a medical examiner and limitations on mental health evidence". The testimony in court of Michael McGee, the Ramsey County Medical Examiner, was “unreliable, misleading and inaccurate” and that Rodriguez's attorneys did him a disservice by opting to limit the mental health evaluation of Rodriguez which could have resulted in the possible use of the insanity defense by their client. [24]

On March 14, 2023, prosecutors announced that they would no longer seek the death penalty for Rodriguez. [25] Rodriguez was sentenced to life without parole on May 18, 2023. [26]

Legacy

Legislation dubbed "Dru's Law", which set up the Dru Sjodin National Sex Offender Public Registry, was passed in 2006 and signed into law by President George W. Bush. The Dru Sjodin National Sex Offender Public Website (NSOPW) is an unprecedented public safety resource that provides the public with access to sex offender data nationwide. NSOPW is a partnership between the U.S. Department of Justice and state, territorial and tribal governments, working together for the safety of adults and children. [27]

In 2004, a scholarship in Sjodin's name was set up at the University of North Dakota. [28]

A memorial garden for Sjodin opened in her hometown of Pequot Lakes, Minnesota, [29] and another is planned for the UND campus.[ citation needed ]

See also

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References

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