It was just more than two years ago, in the fading light of a brilliant spring day, that a five-month search for Danielle Jelinek ended with the discovery of her body in a shallow slough near a rural cul-de-sac in Chisago County.
On Monday, at the county courthouse in Center City, jury selection will open what is expected to be a two-week trial for Aaron Schnagl, 30, the last person known to have seen her alive.
Schnagl, whose home was a quarter-mile east of that slough, was indicted on a third-degree murder charge in December 2013, accused of causing the Oakdale woman's death by providing her with the illegal drugs — in this case, cocaine — that killed her, even if it was unintentional. An autopsy showed cocaine and alcohol in her system, but made no conclusions about the cause and manner of her death, one of the case's several focal points.
The case is the last to be legally resolved involving three Twin Cities women — the others were Kira Steger and Mandy Matula — who vanished over a six-month span from late 2012 to early 2013. All were found dead weeks later after intensive searches.
The long interim from the time of Schnagl's indictment to the trial speaks to the complexity of the case, for both prosecution and defense. The trial originally was slated for March, and a request for a further delay by defense attorney Melvin Welch, who replaced Schnagl's public defender, was denied by Chisago County District Judge Todd Schoffelman.
Months of pretrial hearings, motions and judge's orders have laid out the trial's groundwork, with each side gaining and losing strategic legal ground. In the meantime, the grieving Jelinek family has tried to adjust to their loss. Schnagl has remained incarcerated on drug charges, separated from a young daughter.
Missing in 2012
Jelinek's family first reported her missing on Dec. 9, 2012, when she hadn't made her daily call checking in.
Jelinek, 27, who grew up in Cottage Grove and worked as a manager at the Wells Fargo branch in Maplewood, had last spoken to her sister, Cory, the previous afternoon. Jelinek said she was going to see a girlfriend, but instead went to meet Schnagl. Cory Jelinek has described their relationship as an on-and-off friendship, though Schnagl allegedly had physically abused her on several occasions and admitted to investigators he had struck her at least once.