Larry Myers, a decorated Vietnam War combat veteran, was proud to have served his country, even after the effects of Agent Orange riddled his body with cancer and other ailments.
Myers, 79, was on his way to one of those treatments in late June when he was involved in a minor collision on a southern Minnesota highway — a collision that prosecutors say triggered a fit of rage that ended in his unexplained brutal assault.
Seriously injured, Myers was hospitalized and eventually placed on life support. But he did not recover and was removed. On July 6, the Faribault man died.
Leslie S. Sanders, 52, also of Faribault was charged last week in Rice County District Court with second-degree murder, and first- and third-degree assault in connection with the fatal beating June 27.
Sanders was jailed on assault charges soon after the attack and then released on bail. But he was returned to jail after the murder charge was filed and was being held Tuesday on $1 million bail.
Myers was first taken to a Northfield hospital, then transferred to HCMC in Minneapolis, where doctors found numerous broken facial bones and "a significant brain injury," the charges read.
"Due to the prognosis that [Myers] would not recover and his end-of-life instructions," according to the charges, "[he] was removed from life support and died."
Sanders' attorney, Jacob Birkholz, said Tuesday afternoon that his client has "no criminal history or history of violence."