She was murdered 28 years ago, stabbed and strangled, seemingly for no reason, the case long since grown cold.
Now authorities say they know the identity of the killer, a man who was a teenager at the time and has lived his entire life in Virginia, Minn., the same small town where 83-year-old Leona M. Maslowski met her end.
Authorities are crediting dogged forensic lab work for the arrest of Bruce Wayne Cameron, 44, who appeared Thursday in St. Louis County District Court, accused of murdering Maslowski on Oct. 5, 1987, when he was 16. Cameron remains jailed with bail set at $1 million.
Key to making the case against Cameron was the ability of analysts to determine that Cameron left two fingerprints on a bedroom doorknob in Maslowski's lower duplex residence. Cameron had attended a party in the upper unit and investigators say he admitted to going to the downstairs unit in search of liquor.
Maslowski, a widow who lived alone, was beaten, choked and stabbed in the heart, an autopsy found.
Jim Maslowski got news of the arrest Wednesday through a phone call from a Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension agent.
He said the arrest of his mother's suspected killer brought "a sense of relief and disbelief."
"It's hard to imagine after 28 years," said Maslowski, who lives in Wichita, Kan. "My mind-set was that it would never be resolved."