There will be no "Jailhouse Rock" for an Oakdale woman who discovered that the Elvis Presley painting her brother had given her was reported stolen from the driveway of a house in West Lakeland Township.

"She was embarrassed," said Det. Tim Harris of the Washington County Sheriff's Office, who said this morning that the brother had mistaken the painting as being discarded and gave it to his sister, an Elvis fan.

The woman notified the Sheriff's Office when she saw news reports and returned the painting undamaged, Harris said. No charges will be filed, he said.

The painting by the late Peter Bue, known for his murals outside Minneapolis restaurants, coffee shops and stores, was a depiction of Presley's face from the 1950s movie "King Creole." It disappeared the evening of Jan. 30 when owner Jon Kittelsen mounted it on a saw horse outside to attract guests for a fundraiser he and his wife Heather were hosting. Heather Kittelsen said they recently had moved from Minneapolis to a Washington County hobby farm.

"I was really surprised when I heard it was at the end of the driveway," said Laura Kroeten-Bue of Minneapolis, whose husband died in 2005. She said today that news of the painting's disappearance prompted several inquiries about his work.

The Kittelsens told the Sheriff's Office the painting is worth $15,000. Kroeten-Bue said she thought it had been appraised in Minneapolis.

Peter Bue, also known as Fucci, had autographed the missing painting. He was friends with Jon Kittelsen, an Elvis fan who owns two other Bue paintings of Presley and other Elvis memorabilia.

Kroeten-Bue said that her husband also painted portraits of pop icons Marlon Brando, Audrey Hepburn and Angelina Jolie.

Harris said the painting was recovered Tuesday and the Kittelsens should be taking it home today. His advice for anyone intending to put a prized possession outside:

"If you put something by the curb, plan on it going in the trash or somebody picking it up for free," he said.