A Minneapolis woman has been charged with burglary in a case in which she allegedly took the dog of a woman who rejected her romantic overtures and killed it, according to a criminal complaint.

The complaint alleges that Elizabeth Rose Osterbauer, 24, broke into a home on the 3500 block of Boardman Street in Minneapolis twice, once on Dec. 10, 2015, and again on June 6, 2016.

A witness told police that in the December 2015 break-in, Osterbauer entered the house using a hidden key and stole the dog, according to the complaint.

That witness told police she was present with Osterbauer during the killing of the dog, which Osterbauer “tortured, drugged, and killed.”

Another witness told police she was present during the dognapping and said Osterbauer “took the dog to a state park or wildlife refuge and killed it by stomping on it before drowning it in a marsh,” according to the complaint filed Friday in Hennepin County District Court.

The complaint said Osterbauer had romantic feelings for the dog’s owner, but the owner did not feel the same way.

The victim in the case, Shelly Byzewski, said Monday that she had met Osterbauer at a dog rescue agency where Osterbauer worked, and that Osterbauer developed romantic feelings for her. Byzewski said when she did not reciprocate those feelings, Osterbauer began stalking her.

“She just got obsessed with me,” said Byzewski, 41. “She’s crazy. She’s mental.”

Byzewski said that when her dog, a 3-year-old miniature pinscher named Ducky Momo, disappeared last year, “I suspected her immediately.” Related Articles Marchers shut down I-94 through St. Paul to protest Breonna Taylor decision

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Yet another witness said Osterbauer offered him and other friends $1,000 “to do a job” at the house, the complaint said, but the witness told police they refused. That witness said Osterbauer took “a blanket, vet records and other things that meant something to her” in the burglary.

In the June 2016 break-in, a friend of the home’s resident checked on the house and found it had been broken into, with cat litter strewn throughout the living room, bedroom, kitchen and bathroom, according to the complaint. The toilet had been plugged with cat litter, and water from the toilet poured onto the floor in the bathroom and kitchen and down the stairs leading to the basement and into the living room, the complaint said.

Osterbauer, who was ordered held in lieu of $200,000 bail, could not be reached for comment Monday.

Court records show that Osterbauer was convicted of a misdemeanor charge in 2015 of having multiple dogs at large in Sherburne County.