The Edmore Mystery In North Dakota Still Baffles People Today
The well-known Coen Brothers movie Fargo starts off with the statement that the story was based on true events. This statement was completely false, and the directors did this on purpose to draw attention to their movie and make it a little more interesting. But that’s not to say real “inspiration” isn’t out there. If you have watched the more recent Fargo series on FX – a spin-off of the movie – they have the same statement at the beginning of their episodes. The difference here is that the first season of the show actually draws a lot of inspiration from a very real mystery that is still under speculation today.
None of the movie or show takes place in Fargo or North Dakota at all, but this baffling mystery does take place in this state, in a town called Edmore.


At Engie's house, his truck was parked in the garage and Heck claims he went inside and saw Engie lying on the garage floor, seemingly unwell. He said he decided just to leave Engie there, thinking he was just feeling the effects of the night of drinking. Heck felt there was no need to help him, especially after Engie had just damaged Heck's truck.

For one, the car's engine had been turned off. Engie may have done this himself, but if it was a suicide, why would he? And if he was feet away from his car on the floor, how could he? These questions weren't the only ones that came up. Another piece of confusing evidence was that there was a loaded rifle and a pool of blood about six feet away from where he lay. Where did it come from and what happened? The blood wasn't from Engie himself. The family believed that there was foul play involved here.
The police stood firm on their ruling of a suicide. Heck himself believes that Engie turned the car on to keep warm when it got cold, then started getting woozy both from being drunk and from the fumes. Heck thinks Engie then turned the car off , but wasn't able to get inside before falling unconscious. That still doesn't explain the rifle or blood, but to many it sounds like a viable explanation.
Whether it was Kenneth Engie’s own mistake or choice, or whether someone he’d fought with had “gotten even,” we will never really know. It still draws the curiosity of many today, including the creators of the show Fargo (despite the fact that they set it in Minnesota instead of North Dakota). What do you think happened?
This is one of five baffling mysteries in North Dakota that are still unsolved to this day. Read more about the rest of them here.
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