When police busted into the Minnesota home of missing man David Riess on March 23, 2018, they found the bathroom door shut and a towel wedged tightly along the bottom edge, a sort of makeshift seal.
On the other side, the 54-year-old’s bloodied body lay covered in a blanket, with gunshot wounds to the chest.
His car, a white 2005 Cadillac Escalade, was nowhere to be found. Nor was his wife.
‘The killer grandma’ on the run.
Around the time David’s body was discovered, Lois Riess was sitting in a casino in the town of Northwood, Iowa, more than 60 kilometres south.
Lois, a grandmother of five, was well known as a problem gambler back in Minnesota. Her addiction, and the ways in which she fuelled it, earned her the nickname “Losing Streak Lois” from local authorities.
Over the years, she’d stolen large sums of cash, including more than US$100,000 (AU$145,000) from her cognitively disabled older sister for whom she was the primary guardian, CBS reported. Despite a 2016 court order, Lois never repaid her.
With police searching for her as a ‘person of interest’ in the investigation into her husband’s death, Lois moved south towards Florida. Police later found hand-drawn maps in her car, plotting the route from Minnesota to a town called Fort Myers Beach, according to The Daily Beast.
Along the way, she gambled at various casinos and cashed US$11,000 (roughly AU$16,000) in cheques – some forged – from David’s bank account.