Gloria Frieda Rieken, 18, Went missing in November 1970. Murder unsolved.
From 2019 press release:
Investigators Seek Information From the Public About the Death of a Minneapolis Woman 49 Years Ago
Remains found in abandoned Mille Lacs County home identified through DNA
ST. PAUL — Investigators with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) and the Mille Lacs County Sheriff’s Office have an important new clue in their investigation into the death of a woman found in an abandoned Mille Lacs County home 49 years ago. They now know her name.
Through a DNA match to family members, the BCA has identified the woman as Gloria Frieda Rieken, 18, of Minneapolis. Rieken was a freshman student at the University of Minnesota at the time of her disappearance. One morning in early November, 1970, Rieken left her apartment on foot for school but never arrived.
On November 10, 1970, a neighbor discovered the remains of an unidentified woman inside an abandoned and burned home at 20692 Keystone Road in Mille Lacs County.
At the time, the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office reported that while the fire did not cause the woman’s death, they could not determine what did. Without knowing who she was, how she died, or how she came to be in the home, her death remained a mystery and she was eventually interred at Milo Cemetery in Mille Lacs County.
After hearing about the BCA’s unidentified remains effort, several members of Rieken’s family in Hayfield, Minnesota, came forward in 2013 to provide DNA samples for comparison to unidentified remains. Separately, in 2018 the BCA and a forensic anthropologist assisted the Mille Lacs County Sheriff’s Office with exhuming the woman who had been found in the abandoned home to try to obtain her DNA. The two DNA samples were matched this month.
“Learning her identity gave us our first break in this case in nearly a half century,” said Mille Lacs County Sheriff Don Lorge. “Now we can try to piece together how she came to be in Mille Lacs County, and hopefully, how she died.”
“This is not the ending any family would hope for, but it is information,” said BCA Superintendent Drew Evans. “After a half century of waiting and wondering, the Rieken’s can at last bring Gloria home to rest.”
“Without her family’s decision to come forward, we would never have been able to identify Gloria Rieken,” said BCA Deputy Superintendent of Forensic Science Services Catherine Knutson. “Once again, this speaks to the importance of family members of missing people coming forward to provide DNA samples.”
Investigators are asking the public to come forward with any information about Rieken’s disappearance. Even the smallest detail could help investigators piece together what happened. Anyone with information about Gloria Rieken is urged to contact the Mille Lacs County Sheriff’s Office at 320-983-8250, or the BCA at 651-793-7000, 877-996-6222, or via email at bca.coldcase@state.mn.us. Tips can be anonymous.
Minnesota Department of Public Safety
Office of Communications
Jill Oliveira 651-793-2726
jill.oliveira@state.mn.us
LINK:
https://aws.cert.dps.mn.gov/divisio...eath-of-a-Minneapolis-Woman-49-Years-Ago.aspx