
Woman to serve 364 days in 2023 crash that killed Appleton, Minnesota, man
Apr. 21---- A woman convicted of reckless driving in the Oct. 15, 2023, crash near Milan that killed an
man and seriously injured his wife and children will serve 364 days in jail.
District Court Judge Laurence Stratton on April 16 sentenced Presley Lynn Boogaard, 33, currently an inmate in South Dakota, to serve the jail time beginning on Oct. 15, 2027, the four-year anniversary date of the fatal crash.
She is currently serving a five-year sentence in South Dakota for distribution of a controlled substance, according to the South Dakota Department of Corrections website. It lists her sentencing date as Sept. 24, 2024, and her initial parole date as April 25, 2027.
South Dakota corrections officials did not respond to a photo request before the deadline for this story, and the Chippewa County Sheriff's Office does not have a booking photo.
Boogaard, formerly of Big Stone City, South Dakota, entered an Alford plea in Minnesota's Chippewa County District Court on Feb. 5 to a gross misdemeanor charge of reckless driving — cause great bodily harm. A misdemeanor charge of careless driving was dismissed.
In an Alford plea, which is treated as a guilty plea, a defendant acknowledges a reasonable belief there is sufficient evidence to secure a conviction but does not expressly admit guilt.
The fatal crash occurred shortly after 4 p.m. on a sunny Sunday on a straight and level section of the highway, according to the criminal complaint filed against Boogaard.
She was driving a 2007 Jeep Commander northbound on Minnesota Highway 7/U.S. Highway 59 and collided with a southbound 2006 Chevrolet driven by Curtis Dean Olson, 35 of Appleton.
Olson was pronounced dead at the scene. His wife, Amy Marie Olson, 29 at the time, was transported to the Appleton Area Health Hospital and subsequently airlifted to Avera McKennan and the Avera Heart Hospital in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Amy Olson required surgery for a torn aorta and suffered fractured ribs, lacerations and a broken pelvis, according to a fundraising web page set up for the family after the crash.
Two of the couple's children, Derrick Quienton Olson, then 13, and Shawn Ronnie Olson, then 15, were transported to the Appleton Area Health Hospital for non-life-threatening injuries. The couple's two young daughters were not with them at the time.
The community of
hosted a fundraiser on behalf of the survivors following the crash. Curtis Olson had worked as a butcher at the Appleton Meat Market, and was well-known in the community.
Boogaard suffered non-life-threatening injuries in the crash.
The criminal complaint states that a witness following Boogaard on the highway did not observe any problems with her driving from Montevideo until about 1-1/2 to 2 miles before the crash. He said her Jeep then began swaying within its lane, bad enough that he slowed down and was about to call 911 to report the driving conduct.
Just prior to the crash, the witness saw the Jeep drift to the right, and then jerk from the right shoulder into the oncoming lane of travel right in front of the pickup. He said the oncoming vehicle did not have a chance to avoid the crash, according to the complaint.
Interviewed at the scene by a Minnesota State Patrol trooper, Boogaard said she was shaken by the accident and not really sure what happened. She stated that she swerved, then the other vehicle swerved, and then they collided, the complaint stated.
She had been awake from about 2 to 2:30 a.m. and had worked at a McDonald's restaurant from 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. and said she was tired from being up at the crack of dawn for work that day, but otherwise felt fine.
She showed no sign of drug or alcohol impairment and denied any use of a cellphone or other distractions, according to the complaint.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Drugs inside prison; Shooting arrest; Storm chance
SIOUX FALLS S.D. (KELO) — Here are this morning's top stories with KELOLAND On the Go. The South Dakota Department of Corrections has confirmed three inmate deaths tied to drug overdoses in 2025 in Sioux Falls: one at the state penitentiary and two at the Jameson Annex next door. Jackley: Meth, fentanyl, cocaine behind SD prison walls A man was arrested in connection with a shooting six days ago. Two men and a woman were in an alleyway on 2nd Street on June 4 when an argument broke out around 9:30 a.m. The man shot the other man in the leg. The victim, 39, was taken to the hospital for his injuries. 1 arrested in connection with last week's shooting Even though flowers may not be the most popular gift for Father's Day, there are still plenty of gardening supplies for Dad. It's been said that most men don't receive flowers until their funeral. But with options, like this one complete with a fishing pole – florist Stacy Schapp hopes to change that. Flowers for Fathers Day Several rounds of showers and thunderstorms have moved across KELOLAND the past 24 hours. It looks like another warm day for Sioux Falls with highs in the lower to middle 80s. There is a 20% chance of a thunderstorm this afternoon. More scattered storms ahead this weekend in KELOLAND Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
05-06-2025
- Yahoo
Do you know them? Suspects allegedly steal $3K worth of tires from local business
DENVER (KDVR) — The Commerce City Police Department is looking for three suspects who allegedly stole $3,000 worth of tires from a local business. The department is asking if people recognize three suspects who reportedly cut the fence at Southern Tire Mart last month. Police said they allegedly rolled tires into two vehicles and stole thousands of dollars' worth of high-end tires. FOX31 Newsletters: Sign up to get breaking news sent to your inbox Police said the photos are blurry, but they believe someone could recognize them if they know the suspects. Here are the images captured from the scene: Police said they drove off in a 1998 tan Buick with Wyoming license plate 5-34439 and a white Jeep Commander that appears to be plateless. 'Help us turn this into a Don't. Do. It. Here– a don't expect to steal thousands of dollars worth of product from one of our local businesses and get away with it,' said the department in a post on X. If you can identify them, the department is asking you to reach out to Investigator Couture at 303-727-3915 or ecouture@ Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Yahoo
03-06-2025
- Yahoo
Third-party review ranks Mitchell site fourth for possible state prison, recommends initial Lincoln Co. site
Jun. 2—PIERRE — A Mitchell site ranked fourth out of six options in a third-party "refresh" look at the potential sites for a new state men's prison in South Dakota. A study from Arizona-based Arrington Watkins Architects looked at six options for a South Dakota men's correctional facility and based on a site analysis ranked the existing Lincoln County site owned by the South Dakota Department of Corrections as the top option for the Project Prison Reset panel to consider during its next meeting on Tuesday, June 3 in Pierre. The Mitchell site was described as "remote but promising" but scored 2,040 points out of a maximum 2,975 points when the sites were being sized up on a point scale from 1-to-5 and then multiplied by an importance factor out of 100 points. The Lincoln County plan scored 2,355 points, followed by a Huron plan at 2,220, a Worthing site plan at 2,045 points was third and the former Citibank site in northern Sioux Falls and Mitchell both scored at 2,040 points to tie for fourth. The most important elements for the new prison included location (within 30 miles of Sioux Falls), proximity (not located close to a major interstate, railroads and waterways), size (a minimum site of 126 to 160 acres for a full site) and available site utilities. The Lincoln County site scored a 5 in location, proximity and site size. Mitchell scored 3s in location and proximity and a 5 for size but did not score higher than a 4 in any other category. Among the positives in the Mitchell site analysis included the 160-acre land size, the generally flat land and the ability to develop a maximum of 1,728 beds. However, the nearby city lagoons for wastewater would still require a lift station, adding costs to the project, infrastructure improvements would have to be made to the site and the plan noted the site could have escape issues. "The location is 70 miles from Sioux Falls, which results in added costs for inmate transportation and support services," the study said. "It is also located just over one mile from Interstate 90, and within a mile of a railroad and the James River, which provides potential escape routes for inmates." Proposals from Aberdeen and Grant County were eliminated due to their remote distances from Sioux Falls, while five other sites closer to Sioux Falls were eliminated due to buildability issues with the land and the proposed sites. The remaining six sites were then considered for a conceptual plan and a "test fit," Arrington Watkins said. "The goal of the concept plans is to take the resulting buildable area left on each site after site analysis and represent a prison size and bed count that could utilize each site," the study said. "They are not a proposal for what should or should not be built on each site." The Lincoln County site is located about 10 miles south of Sioux Falls between Harrisburg and Canton on a 160-acre site that the state of South Dakota owns. Earlier this year, it was projected to cost $825 million to build the 1,500-bed facility. Nearby landowners to the proposed site have voiced opposition to the plan and to how the state was moving ahead with a largely secretive process to approve the prison. In February, a bill in the South Dakota Legislature to fund the remainder of the prison project failed, leading to Gov. Larry Rhoden to appoint the Project Prison Reset task force to reassess the plan. That brought on the consideration of potential new sites around the state. The state has already spent more than $60 million on the previous design and prep work for the initial Lincoln County plan. In Monday's latest look at the prison options, Arrington Watkins said the existing Lincoln County site is "10 miles from Sioux Falls, is not in proximity to major interstates, railroads, or major waterways, has the size for a full build of 1,728 beds ... is ranked high for site access, and only scored poorly for site utilities and potential additional cost during development." "The property is already owned by the DOC and is adjacent to another 160-acre parcel owned by the DOC that can be used for future expansion or support functions," the report said. "This is a strong candidate for phase one development now. ... Lincoln County was followed on the ranking system by the Huron site, which also scored well, but is very remote and directly adjacent to a major highway. Our recommendation for site selection for phase 1 development of the men's capacity plan is the Lincoln County site."