Authorities were on Michael A. Withers' tracks for decades, following his footsteps in the snow from a burglary scene to his home, or catching him on surveillance video sticking a gun in a Subway shop employee's face while an accomplice locked another in the freezer.
Yet, the serial burglar with a nearly predictable modus operandi and who had confessed to several burglaries kept them stumped for 30 years in the cold case of Lillian Kuller, an 81-year-old former Ziegfeld Follies dancer found dead in her St. Paul home.
They finally caught up with Withers, 58, Thursday thanks to DNA testing, and charged him in Ramsey County District Court with one count each of second-degree murder with intent and second-degree murder without intent for killing Kuller.
"It's been a long time coming," Kuller's grandson, Mark Kuller, said at an afternoon news conference announcing the charges. "This is a sad day for me, but … it's so great, too."
Withers is currently in prison in Stillwater for two unrelated burglary cases in Ramsey County, and is scheduled to be released in October.
Sometime between the late night hours of Jan. 31 and the early morning hours of Feb. 1, 1987, authorities believe Withers broke into Kuller's duplex in the 1200 block of Goodrich Avenue, where the widow lived alone, killed her and ransacked her home.
Officers at the scene found Kuller lying on a bed with a pillow over her head and upper body, the criminal complaint said. The Ramsey County medical examiner's office found that she suffered multiple abrasions on the head and hemorrhages between the skull and the scalp and in her neck. She died of "asphyxia associated with assault."
"She had emphysema," Mark Kuller said as he recalled how her family struggled for years with the unsolved crime. "She probably weighed 90 pounds. Why would somebody do something like that? She's not going to struggle. Just take what you're going to take. Material items are not worth somebody's life."