

"Honey, we will find you," said her father, Allan Sjodin.
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"I'm a widow and I'm older, and I was scared, so I had my son-in-law come over and install a motion light after he moved in," Sonja Thygeson, who lives about four houses down from Rodriguez, told The Associated Press.Īnother neighbor, Milton Stave, told The AP "there were a lot of frightened people around," when it was announced that Rodriguez was moving in.Īt the police news conference this morning, Sjodin's family pledged to keep searching for the young woman. Rodriguez, officials said, had not shown any signs of recidivism during his time in prison, and in February 2001 an evaluation board recommended that he not be considered for civil confinement even after he finished serving his sentence. The woman escaped, and Rodriguez was later arrested with the help of a sketch.Īuthorities said he was a well-behaved prisoner, with only one disciplinary offense during his incarceration. In the 1979 assault case, Rodriguez tried to abduct a woman off the street and stabbed her when she fought back. "Once they're released, they need to be tracked for the rest of their lives. "There are circumstances where sex offenders are not curable and they need to be incarcerated longer, be kept off the streets longer or worse," he said. Pawlenty also called for legislation that would enable sex offenders to be tracked for the rest of their lives after their release from prison, perhaps with Global Positioning System technology. It will be an uphill battle, but I am going to push it." "I know this is strong language, particularly for Minnesota. I'm fed up with these stories where we have children abducted, women abducted with a not very good system for resolving the issue," Pawlenty said at an afternoon press conference. "As a Minnesotan, as a governor, as a dad of two youngdaughters, I'm fed up. Pawlenty said he is tired of hearing stories about convicted sex offenders preying upon victims after getting out of prison. Minnesota is one of 12 states that do not have the death penalty. Tim Pawlenty said Dru Sjodin's case is a wakeup call for legislators to consider new laws that would enable sex offenders to be imprisoned longer - and face the death penalty when sexual assaults are coupledwith murders or attempted murder.
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He was released from a Minnesota prison in May after serving a full 23-year sentence for an attempted abduction in Crookston in 1979. Rodriguez has convictions for rape, attempted kidnapping andaggravated assault, and has used a weapon in at least one assault,according to the Minnesota Corrections Department. Authorities declined to comment further on specifics of the case, citing respect for Sjodin's family. Police said they have reason to believe suspect Rodriguez was in the parking lot where Sjodin was last seen. He is scheduled to make his first court appearance on Wednesday, when authorities will seek his extradition to North Dakota.

Rodriguez, 50, was arrested Monday evening in Crookston, Minn., where he lives, and charged with kidnapping. We will not be comforted or satisfied until we have found Dru." "With the arrest of Alfonso Rodriguez Jr., last night, this investigation has only reached the 50-yard line. "Dru, we will find you," Grand Forks Police Chief John Packett told a news conference today. She had been talking on her cell phone to her boyfriend, who told police he heard her say "Oh my God" before the line went dead. She had just left work after finish her shift at a Victoria's Secret store in a Grand Forks mall, and was last seen in the mall parking lot. Sjodin, a student at the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks, has been missing since Nov. Police, meanwhile, vowed to press on with the search for Dru Sjodin, 22. 2, 2003 - A day after a convicted rapist was arrested in the disappearance of a college student, Minnesota's governor called today for new laws to keep sex predators incarcerated longer and make them eligible for the death penalty in murder cases.
