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Nun Murdered on Halloween; FBI Searches Navajo Reservation for Clues to Marguerite Bartz's Killer

(AP Photo/Diocese of Gallup)
Photo: Sister Marguerite Bartz.

NAVAJO, N.M. (CBS/AP) It was the day after Halloween in a small community on the Navajo Indian reservation near the Arizona-New Mexico border and Sister Marguerite Bartz failed to show up to Sunday Mass.

A colleague went to check on her and discovered the 64-year-old nun dead in her residence, the FBI said Monday.

Investigators believe Bartz was killed sometime between Halloween night and Sunday morning, but FBI Special Agent Darrin Jones said he could not disclose any details about how she died.

The FBI and state police were searching her residence for any clues.

Authorities and officials with the Diocese of Gallup, which oversees the parish in Navajo, said they were not sure whether Bartz or the church were the target, or if the attack was a random act.

Authorities were also searching for Bartz's vehicle, a beige 2005 Honda CR-V with a New Jersey license plate, and asking anyone who spoke to Bartz on Halloween night to contact investigators.

"We would very much like the public's assistance if they saw anything or heard anything," Jones said. "You never know what little detail may help."

Bartz was one of more than a dozen Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament who are currently ministering within the Diocese of Gallup, which spans 55,000 square miles in New Mexico and Arizona.

The diocese said Bartz had entered the order in 1966 from Beaumont, Texas, and professed final vows in 1974. She had ministered in Massachusetts, Louisiana and in several communities around New Mexico before ending up at St. Berard in 1999.

A spokesman for the diocese said the bishop has been in contact with the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, and those at the parish in Navajo were shaken up about the incident.

The diocese said there is usually another sister who lives at the residence with Bartz, but she was out of the state at a meeting and Bartz was alone.

"She was known to be a woman always passionate for justice and peace, and the life she lived would tell us that she would respond to this incident with a spirit of forgiveness towards whoever is responsible for these acts," the diocese said in a statement released Monday.

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