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Christmas card shows up in mail decades after it was mailed

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Lisa Sherwood’s family has changed a lot since their 2002 Christmas card photo.

WACONIA, Minn. — We drop our cards and letters in the mailbox, just assuming they’ll reach their destinations.

Such was Lisa Sherwood’s assumption, until she opened her mailbox three weeks ago.

“This is the Christmas card I sent to my friend back in 2002,” says Lisa, pointing to an off-white envelope. 

Strange as it seemed, the card Lisa had mailed from her home in Waconia to a high school friend in Bloomington more than two decades ago, was back in her mailbox, unopened and marked “RETURN TO SENDER.” 

A 37-cent stamp was affixed to the envelope.

The postmark was dated Dec. 6, 2002.

“I know it made it as far as Minneapolis because that’s where it’s postmarked,” Lisa says. “Where it went after that, who knows?”


Where the card didn’t go is to the intended recipient, Tracy Logelin, who was living in an apartment on Nicollet Avenue when Lisa mailed the card.

“We’ve been exchanging Christmas cards since high school,” Tracy says. 

Tracy produces a stack of Sherwood family photo cards she’s saved over the years. It never occurred to her that one was missing.

“I didn’t even think anything of it,” she says. “I just assumed that was a year she didn’t send Christmas cards.”

Nor did Lisa have any reason to think the card hadn’t reached its destination.


After inspecting the outside, she opened the returned envelope to find a picture card of her young family inside.

“The kids were 3 and 6,” Lisa says.  

Tracy’s son Connor is 24 now and lives with friends in Edina.

Her daughter Madison is 27.

“My daughter’s been married four years and lives in Sweden with her husband,” Tracy says. “I didn’t have gray hair back then.” 

Tracy laughs, then adds, “My husband had more hair back then.”  

Both women speculate the card spent the past two decades lost at the post office, possibly between cabinets or inside a sorting machine.


But Desai Abdul-Razzaaq, a Minneapolis Post Office spokesperson, is doubtful of that theory.  

“What we typically find is that old letters and postcards – sometimes purchased at flea markets, antique shops and even online – are re-entered into our system,” Desai says.  

One thing is certain, the newly found card wasn’t about to be forwarded to Tracy.

“I figured out that it was actually six addresses ago that I lived in that apartment,” she says.

Tracy lives in Arizona now.


But Desai Abdul-Razzaaq, a Minneapolis Post Office spokesperson, is doubtful of that theory.  

“What we typically find is that old letters and postcards – sometimes purchased at flea markets, antique shops and even online – are re-entered into our system,” Desai says.  

One thing is certain, the newly found card wasn’t about to be forwarded to Tracy.

“I figured out that it was actually six addresses ago that I lived in that apartment,” she says.

Tracy lives in Arizona now.

“No way they were going to find me,” Tracy says, “and no way they were even going to try.”

Call it a mailbox mystery – that’s doubled as a new connection between two old friends.

“I actually am going to ask Lisa if she’ll resend me the card, so I have it in my stack,” Tracy says.


The wayward Christmas card may not be done traveling.   

“I guess that’s what I’m doing then,” Lisa says.

Boyd Huppert is always looking for great stories to share in the Land of 10,000 Stories! Send us your suggestions by filling out this form.


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Woman who stabbed classmate in Slender Man case asks for release

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Morgan Geyser, who is now 22 years old, filed a third petition seeking her release from a psychiatric hospital.

WAUKESHA, Wis. — A Wisconsin woman accused of stabbing her classmate to please horror character Slender Man more than a decade ago asked a judge again Friday to release her from a psychiatric hospital.

Morgan Geyser, who is now 22 years old, filed a petition with Waukesha County Circuit Judge Michael Bohren seeking her release from the Winnebago Mental Health Institute. The petition marks the third time in the last two years she has asked Bohren to let her out of the facility.

She withdrew her first petition two months after filing it in 2022. Bohren denied her second request this past April, saying she remains a risk to the public.

Geyser’s attorney, Anthony Cotton, didn’t immediately respond to email and telephone messages Friday morning.

Geyser and Anissa Weier were 12 in 2014 when they lured Payton Leutner to a Waukesha park after a sleepover. Geyser stabbed Leutner 19 times while Weier egged her on. Leutner barely survived.

The girls later told investigators they wanted to earn the right to be servants of the fictional Slender Man and that they feared he would harm their families if they didn’t carry out the attack.

Geyser pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree intentional homicide and was sent to the psychiatric institute because of mental illness. Weier pleaded guilty to attempted second-degree intentional homicide and was also sent to the psychiatric center. She was granted a release in 2021 to live with her father and was ordered to wear a GPS monitor.



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Fall colors at peak in northern Minnesota

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According to KARE 11 Meteorologist John Zeigler, trees between central Minnesota and just south of the Iron Range are in peak color condition.

MINNEAPOLIS — If you’re planning a trip north of the Twin Cities this weekend, you’re in for a fortune of fall foliage.

According to KARE 11 Meteorologist John Zeigler, trees between central Minnesota and just south of the Iron Range are in peak color condition.

“If you’re around the Twin Cities, there hasn’t been a lot of changeover yet,” Zeigler said. “So, this is the changeover happening now north of Saint Cloud. If you go up toward the Iron Range here, I actually think it might be a little bit too late.”

Zeigler said to hit spots like the Brainerd Lakes Area, in addition to cities near Duluth.

“If I was traveling to the north and I want to see the perfect colors, I would go to Two Harbors,” he said. “I would go to Duluth [or] Brainerd Lakes Area is great.” 

Zeigler said if peak leaf peeping is what you’re after, Saturday will be the warmer of the two days, but Sunday is also an option — as long as you bust out your winter garb and bundle up.

“Sunday is not a bad day, but look at the 40s in Duluth — even in Hayward we’re in the forties,” Zeigler said. “Maybe a little bit of rain during the morning hours and breezy, so if you’re gonna be out there on Sunday, 40s, put your jacket on. Actually, I would pack a bigger coat heading to the north.”

Zeigler said it will still be a few weeks before we hit a peak in the metro and other communities in southern Minnesota.

KARE 11 will continue to update peak fall color progress. You can also check in with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Fall Color Finder Map on the agency’s website.



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Derrick Thompson guilty on federal gun and drug charges

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The charges are connected to a fatal incident in which Thompson is accused of hitting a vehicle with his SUV, resulting in the deaths of five young women.

ST PAUL, Minn. — A jury has found Derrick Thompson guilty of drug and firearm charges stemming from a high-speed crash that claimed the lives of five young women in Minneapolis.

Thompson faced three charges – possession with intent to distribute fentanyl, being a felon in possession of a firearm and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime. 

The trial lasted less than a week. On Tuesday, jurors watched a violent and graphic video that showed Thompson’s rented SUV running a red light at high speed and crashing into a vehicle waiting at a stoplight. All five passengers inside the car that was struck were killed. 

But both prosecutors and Thompson’s defense team told jurors it was not the most important piece of evidence they’d see in the case, urging them not to attempt to analyze the crash itself. 

“This is a case about an armed drug dealer,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Calhoun-Lopez told the panel. “We are here today because (the) defendant crashed that car carrying 2,000 fentanyl pills, cocaine, fentanyl powder, and a loaded gun.”

Calhoun-Lopez explained Derrick Thompson’s subsequent fleeing and lying to police following the deadly crash proves the gun and drugs were his. In addition, DNA testing links Thompson to the items.

But the defense offered the jury an alternative theory that was absent from the public realm until recently when it was revealed that Thompson had a passenger in the rental car – his brother Damarco Thompson.

Thompson’s attorney Matthew Deates told jurors that Damarco is the flashier of the Thompson brothers and that he likes colorful, flashy things like the blue cap police found on the passenger side of the Escalade. Deates added that the colorful wrap on the handgun matches those tastes and that the spot where police found the bag containing the gun and drugs also points to the defendant’s brother. The bag was located under Damarco’s blue hat.

“That is the definition of confirmation bias. It’s tunnel vision. It does not make it right. This caused the government to charge the wrong person. But you – as the jury – gets to weigh the evidence and decide,” Deates said in his opening statement.

Thompson’s legal woes are far from over – he faces five counts of third-degree murder and five counts of criminal vehicular homicide at the state level. 



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