Amazing $1 million
reward has been offered by an anonymous donor for credible information leading
to the pair of Judy Garland’s famous sequined, ruby red slippers stolen from a
museum in her Minnesota hometown.
Garland wore the slippers in “The Wizard of Oz.” There
are only three other pairs that still exist, including one on display at the
Smithsonian Institution in Washington.
John Kelsch, executive director of the Judy Garland
Museum in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, says the donor is from Arizona and is a big
fan of Garland and the 1939 film.
The reward requires the exact location of the slippers
and the perpetrator’s name.
In June, the Itasca County Sheriff’s Dive Team
investigated a rumor that the slippers were in the Tioga Mine Pit, which is 238
feet deep. The mine contains tons of trash and it was possible they slippers
could have been in there.
The dive team executed a practice dive in early June and
recovered items possibly linked to the case.
"The biggest thing that ever happened to our museum
was getting the slippers stolen," Jonny Miner, Treasurer of the Board for
the Judy Garland Museum, told KQDS last month.
Miner also said the crime could have been prevented.
"The worst part about it was is we had a safe the
bank had loaned us to put them in and they guy that owned them didn't want us
to handle them," he said.
Police say the glass case containing the slippers was smashed
with a bat and the person or persons stole the prized possession.
The 10-year anniversary of the theft is in August. The
slippers were insured for $1 million. Kelsch says they could be worth between
$2 million and $3 million now.
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