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Woman arrested in 40-year-old Denver slaying

A 65-year-old woman wanted in a 1968 slaying at a Denver bar was arrested Friday in Dayton, Ohio, where police say she had been living under an alias.

Tina Lester
This image provided by the Montgomery Ohio Sheriff's department shows the arrest photo of Tina Lester. The 65-year-old woman was wanted in a 1968 slaying in Denverand was arrested Friday Feb. 6, 2009 in Dayton, Ohio, where police say she's been living under an alias. Denver police spokeswoman Sharon Avendano says Tina Lester was arrested Friday on suspicion of first-degree murder in the death of 36-year-old Ronald Schlatter of LaPorte. According to police the arrest resulted from the execution of the old...

A 65-year-old woman wanted in a 1968 slaying at a Denver bar was arrested Friday in Dayton, Ohio, where police say she had been living under an alias.

Denver police spokeswoman Sharon Avendano said Tina Louise Lester was arrested at her home on suspicion of first-degree murder. Lester is accused of fatally shooting 36-year-old Ronald E. Schlatter of the northern Colorado town of LaPorte.

Her arrest stemmed from the "oldest outstanding murder warrant obtained by the Denver Police Department," said Avendano.

Avendano said she didn't know if Lester had an attorney. She had been living in Dayton under the name Agnes Ramey.

According to a Denver Post article from the time, Schlatter was playing pool at the Blue Chip Bar on Nov. 8, 1968, when he and Lester got into a scuffle. Lester, a Denver resident, allegedly pulled out a .22-caliber gun and shot Schlatter in the chest.

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Witnesses told police Schlatter grabbed the gun and fired three shots at Lester as she fled. Schlatter then collapsed and died.

Avendano said "good police work" and the use of new technologies led to Lester's arrest.

"A determined police officer followed up on the case and was able to find her," she said. "How that was, I don't know exactly."

Denver police were headed to Dayton to question Lester and possibly transport her back to Colorado, Jim Wahlrad of the U.S. Marshals Service told the Dayton Daily News.

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