Lee Urness was destined to follow his father, Douglas County Sheriff Howard Urness, and his grandfather and great-grandfathers before him, into a law enforcement career.
With the sheriff's house connected to the jail, Lee Urness practically grew up in the Douglas County jail.
Urness, who died May 19 from a heart attack, became the fourth generation of his family in law enforcement with a distinguished 31-year career. He was 71.
A Hamline University basketball player and graduate, he joined the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension as an undercover narcotics agent in 1972.
In 1977 he was promoted to team leader, and during the course of his BCA career he tracked thousands of cases, probably none that attracted as much attention from the public and the press as the case of Andrew Cunanan.
For 79 days in 1997, Cunanan crisscrossed the country eluding law enforcement and a growing pool of reporters.
Urness was an agent on the Minnesota FBI fugitive task force investigating the case that began with the murders of Jeffrey Trail in Bloomington and architect David Madson in Minneapolis, and ended in Florida after Cunanan killed international fashion designer Gianni Versace before ultimately taking his own life.
In his retirement, Urness and author Dave Racer collaborated on a book about Cunanan, "Death by Design."