DULUTH — A woman with ties to an organized retail theft ring has told federal investigators that Jerry Hal Saliterman, the second man accused of stealing ruby slippers worn by Judy Garland in “The Wizard of Oz,” had the famous shoes buried in his backyard for at least seven years.
The unnamed woman, who is described as a “cooperating defendant,” saw the slippers in a grocery bag, according to court documents. Instead of anonymously returning them — like she said she asked — they were put in a clear plastic container with a white lid and buried near a shed on the south side of Saliterman’s lawn in Crystal.
They were treated in an ultraviolet sanitizer cabinet, the woman told authorities, to remove traces of DNA.
Saliterman, who has a long history of stealing, was recently charged with the theft of a major artwork for his alleged role in snatching the ruby slippers. The movie memorabilia was stolen in 2005 from a Grand Rapids, Minn., museum named for the actor who briefly lived in the city. The slippers were recovered in a sting operation in 2018.
But the case had been quiet for years, until Terry Jon Martin, who had long lived 15 miles away from the museum, pleaded guilty to stealing the slippers in 2023.
Martin, who admitted to taking a sledgehammer to the slippers’ display case during the museum’s off-hours, testified that he believed the shoes were decorated with real gems. After his fence — someone who helps move stolen goods — told him the “rubies” were glass, he said he gave up the shoes and never saw them again.
Martin was sentenced in federal court to a year of probation and remains in his rural mobile home on hospice care. He also was ordered to pay $300 a month in restitution to the Judy Garland Museum.
Saliterman is scheduled for a jury trial that starts May 20 in Minneapolis.