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Dakota Datebook
November 28, 2003
"Flett and Remington"
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On this date in 1912, a Fargo newspaper article read:
MURDERER SENTENCED FOR LIFE IS PARDONED.
North Dakotas were outraged when a Casselton native was
granted parole despite having been convicted of what was considered one
of the most cold-blooded killings in the states history. More than
20 years earlier, Joe Remington, who had grown up between Casselton and
Arthur, had been sentenced to life in prison for what hed done.
The article read: The last and closing chapter
in one of the most notorious murders ever committed in North Dakota is
now closed. Joe Remington, sentenced to prison for life for the murder
of James T. Flett at Arthur, this country, has become a free man as a
result of the clemency of the state board of pardons.
The murder was one of the most cold-blooded crimes
in the state and is vividly recalled by the pioneers of this section.
Remington was raised at Casselton between here and Arthur, and in the
fall of (1890), was employed on a farm near the latter place.
He took a load of wheat to Arthur, and in those
days the elevator agents carried large sums of money, frequently paying
in cash. Remington saw Fletts roll.
Afterwards Remington went to Minneapolis and for a short period
drove a hack. He formed the acquaintance of a notorious woman there and
soon spent what money he had saved. Her demands on him recalled the money
he had seen Flett carry.
Remington quietly returned to Arthur, concealed
himself in the hayloft of the elevator, and in the darkness when Flett
came in to feed the horses, Remington brutally beat him to death and escaped
with the money.
The murderer was arrested at La Crosse where he
had gone with the woman. When he returned to Fargo he pleaded guilty and
received a life sentence. The state board of pardons commuted his sentence
last summer to 23 years, and now Remington has stepped from the penitentiary
at Bismarck a free man.
The 1912 article continued, Since the recent lynching
at Steele, many editors of the state have boldly asserted the mob violence
was directly due to the leniency shown by the pardon board to Remington,
who was guilty of one of the most brutal murders in the history of the
state.
Yet the newspaper told another side of the story, as
well, when it went on to say:
Remington has had a remarkable record in the state
penitentiary and is said never to have violated a rule of the institution.
He has been regarded by Warden Hellstrom as a trusty and for
two years had charge of the penitentiary exhibit at the state industrial
show at Bismarck without a guard.

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