Two Minnesota fishermen have made an unexpected discovery under the Mississippi River this week, when Sonar Technology has encouraged them to say to the authorities, may be a break in decades -old cold.
Brody Loch, one of the fishermen, said CNN’s subsidiary WCCO, he noticed a river car in the river last weekend. Three days later, on Wednesday, divers found a vehicle and found people’s remains inside, CNN told Stearns County Sheriff Steve soka.
“It was 100% success if my buddy hadn’t caught that Walleye, we would have been constantly floating (river) and never found,” Loch said.
Soka said she was afraid that the BUIK car of the 1960s could break if it was raised to the surface, depending on the time the vehicle was submerged. But when investigators pulled Buick out of the river, “surprisingly, it turned out to be quite intact,” he said.
After working with a local towing company to remove the car from the water, the investigators then coordinated the car’s vehicle identification number to Roy Benn, who disappeared in 1967. September, as the Sheriff’s Bureau said in a press release.
According to the criminal fear of the Minnesota Bulletin from the Minnesota, the last time of the Minnesota’s hometown was in Minnesota, in Minnesota, the last time was seen while driving in 1963. Metal Blue Buick Electra.
“Based on the car found and the VIN vehicle number, the (local) sheriff’s offices believe this is Mr. Benn,” the Stearns County Sheriff’s service said in a statement.
It was reported that Benn “carrying a large sum of money when the last time was visible”, according to the office.
Roy George Benn was last heard in 1967. September, according to the Minnesota Criminal Output Bureau. – WCCO
The search for Benn lasted months after its disappearance and over five decades after the last vision.
The St. Cloud Daily Times archives reviewed by CNN revealed a man who disappeared without a trace almost 60 years ago after the last to see the dinner earlier that day at the King’s Suvper club north of Sartell, Minnesota.
Benn, 59, was a businessman and St. The owner of a cloud repair service that died a year ago, said St. Cloud Daily Times.
His brother Walter Benn worked with law enforcement officials after Roy’s disappearance because the investigators persecuted the leaders who never resolved the case.
Benton County Sheriff Troy Heck, whose department was tasked with investigating Roy Benn’s missing case from its disappearance, CNN investigators from their office received leaders over the years, but none of them “failed.”
According to the St. Cloud Daily Times, Walter Benn in 1968 Prepared his personal property at the auction in 1968.
According to The St. Cloud Daily Times, Roy Benn was declared legally dead in 1975, eight years after disappearance.
The Benton County Sheriff’s Office is led by the investigation of the case, and Buick residues were sent to the medical examiner’s office to inspect.
Heck warned that “some of the typical methods our partners, the medical expert’s bureau of the medical expert, would use to identify, not real” because the length of the body was underwater.
“We believe there are strong signs that it will be a Roy Benn vehicle, and that is probably its remains,” Heck said.
Heck added that the closest relative of Roy Benn was informed of the discovery. The department had previously contacted them to receive family DNA.
“We are just grateful that we may have finally got a break that we needed to close this family,” Heck said.
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