EBOOK

A Death in White Bear Lake

The True Chronicle of an All-American Town

Barry Siegel
4.4
(27)
Pages
530
Year
2017
Language
English

About

In 1962, Jerry Sherwood gave up her newborn son, Dennis, for adoption. Twenty years later, she set out to find him-only to discover he had died before his fourth birthday. The immediate cause was peritonitis, but the coroner had never decided the mode of death, writing "deferred" rather than indicate accident, natural causes, or homicide. This he did even though the autopsy photos showed Dennis covered from head to toe in ugly bruises, his clenched fists and twisted facial expression suggesting he had died writhing in pain. Harold and Lois Jurgens, a middle-class, churchgoing couple in picturesque White Bear Lake, Minnesota, had adopted Dennis and five other foster children. To all appearances, they were a normal midwestern family, but Jerry suspected that something sinister had happened in the Jurgens household. She demanded to know the truth about her son's death. Why did authorities dismiss evidence that marked Dennis as an endangered child? Could Lois Jurgens's brother, a local police lieutenant, have interfered in the investigation? And most disturbing of all, why had so many people who'd witnessed Lois's brutal treatment of her children stay silent for so long? Determined to find answers, local detectives and prosecutors rebuilt the case brick by brick, finally exposing the shocking truth behind a nightmare in suburbia.

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Reviews

"Fascinating . . . A work of compelling narrative force and enduring value, A Death in White BearLake guides us along an increasingly clear path-from horror to enlightenment"
The New York Times Book Review
"Telling detail . . . and crack research . . . [fill] Barry Siegel's book. But those are not the only authorial virtues displayed. There's the book's very structure, which keeps the revelations coming, one right after the next. Then too there's the restraint. Siegel lets the players damn themselves as they reminisce about the case . . . And Siegel manages, despite the widespread national publicity
The Washington Post
"Fascinating reading."
Detroit Free Press

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