Full Disclosure: A mission to clear his uncle’s name
| By James Eli Shiffer, Star Tribune (Minneapolis) | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
Patrin lowered himself onto a couch and flipped through the binders. Plastic envelopes held photocopied news clippings, a yellowing insurance policy, an old
Then, a copy of a death certificate dated
The death merited a three-paragraph story in the newspaper that left no doubt that it was self-inflicted. "Relatives said the man, discharged from the
Patrin was a teenager when his uncle died, and his family hid the article from him. He discovered it in his mother's papers years later, and what seemed to him the sheer absurdity of the official account compelled him to try to set the record straight.
Patrin, who's 84, a retired
Patrin thinks he knows who did it, but no cop would even make an arrest on the evidence he offers. Yet given the suspicious events preceding Fietek's death, the authorities should not have left it up to his nephew to do a real investigation decades after justice could be served.
Growing up on
Patrin said his uncle, who grew up in rural
Fietek asked Patrin's mother to add her name to the establishment, and he opened for business. Not long after, Fietek got a visit from two men in business suits and hats. Patrin, who helped his uncle around the bar, saw the men sitting across a table from Fietek. They took out two wads of bills. Fietek rejected the "partnership" offer.
Not long after, the men were back. They pointed across the street to the
At closing time one night in the fall of 1945, the men in the black sedan returned. They asked Fietek to get in, and, foolishly, he did.
They left Fietek with two broken legs on a remote stretch of County Road D, probably hoping he would get run over and the death would look like an accident. Fietek survived, but his legs were crippled. He moved into the ground floor of his brother's duplex on
On
"Police said the man had a necktie tied tightly around his neck and that a wire attached to an overhead pipe had given way, dropping him onto a pile of wood," the newspaper reported.
Fietek never wore a tie. More to the point, how could a man with little use of his legs make his way into the basement, string wire around pipes and climb up on a pile of firewood?
Then there was Patrin's encounter with one of the "bag men," who showed up at his uncle's viewing the day before the funeral. Nearly 70 years later, the words still live with Patrin. "It's too bad about your uncle, but he was such a hardheaded Polack," the man told him. "The pain must have been intense."
His uncle's service was held at the
A couple of weeks later, an advertisement appeared in the newspaper announcing the reopening of Swing City, "under new management."
Fietek's story would have been buried with him had his nephew not pestered everyone in sight with his relentless research. Patrin hoped he could get the death certificate corrected, maybe prompt the authorities to reopen the investigation. So far, he has contented himself with the journalists and historians who have, finally, listened.
I asked Patrin what his uncle would think of his mission. He looked up from his binders and took a breath.
"I think he would have been proud of me, because I never gave up on him."
Contact
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(c)2014 the Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
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