Ladies and gentlemen, Jesse has left the building -- but he'll be back.
The official state portrait of former Gov. Ventura and those of former Govs. Elmer L. Andersen and Harold LeVander were removed Wednesday from the State Capitol after officials found they had been defaced with felt markers.
Thin red marks were found on Ventura's white shirt and across Andersen's mouth, and a black mark was discovered above LeVander's lips.
White-gloved curators with the Minnesota Historical Society, which oversees art in the Capitol, took down the three paintings for repairs.
Unless someone saw who drew on the paintings and reports that information, it's unlikely the culprit or culprits will be identified, said Bill Keyes, director of the state's historic sites and museums.
All three paintings hang in the Capitol's ground-floor corridor, which, unlike the upper floors, doesn't have security cameras.
Suspects? Keyes figures that it was probably schoolkids who have jammed the Capitol on field trips this week.
"This is a very rare occurrence. ... We look at it as a kind of prank, but nonetheless we take it seriously," he said.