After nearly 30 years as general manager of a grain elevator in Ashby, Minn., Jerry Hennessey disappeared just as authorities began looking into a major problem with the elevator's books.
Now the Ashby Farmers Cooperative Elevator believes Hennessey may have stolen more than $2 million and spent it on hunting safaris, taxidermy, home improvements and other personal expenses, a lawyer for the co-op board said last week.
Hennessey was last seen two weeks ago, and "it's my understanding that there has been no further hide nor hair of him" since then, said Erik Ahlgren, a Fergus Falls lawyer who is representing the co-op as it tries to piece together the money trail.
The elevator, which is jointly owned by about 300 farmers, closed Sept. 10 and is essentially bankrupt, Ahlgren said.
"We have been talking to area co-ops about acquiring the assets and reopening the elevator," he said. "The most important thing is to get this elevator open."
People in Ashby, a town of 440 residents about 165 miles northwest of the Twin Cities, had wondered whether Hennessey was living beyond his means, Ahlgren said.
Hennessey went on hunting trips to such places as Alaska, New Zealand and Australia. He had an extensive collection of professionally mounted trophies at his home and even built a special room to hold them.
"The story was that he was really good at grain trading and he traded for his own accounts," Ahlgren said. "I can't tell you whether he really did, but that was the story."