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  • Gillette Children’s teams up with Twins to present custom baseball helmet for Andover teen with a rare medical condition

    Gillette Children’s teams up with Twins to present custom baseball helmet for Andover teen with a rare medical condition

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    MINNEAPOLIS — Fifteen-year-old Bennett Fisk, of Andover, loves baseball and has been playing youth league his whole life.

    “It gives me something to do when I’m just sitting there, and it helps me with teamwork,” said Fisk.

    Unfortunately, last season, he had to sit out because even the largest adult-size baseball helmet didn’t fit his head and it was too unsafe to play without a helmet. 

    Bennett was born with hydrocephalus, which caused fluid to build up in his brain and the size of his head grew faster and larger than it should have.

    “We kind of thought I couldn’t play baseball anymore,” said Fisk. 

    Then the Twins stepped in and teamed up with Rawlings Sports Equipment and Gillette Children’s Hospital to make sure Bennett could stick with his passion. Nick Anderson, with Gillette Children’s,  met with Bennett over six months to build and fit a custom helmet for him.

    MORE NEWS: Prince’s New Power Generation come together to honor late musician in tribute concert

    530p-bennett-helmet-pkg-lunemann-mohs-00-01-3000.jpg

    WCCO


    “I had to get some custom foam fitting that had to be 3D printed made for the inside, that’s just for this helmet, and that gave us the tolerances that allow it to fit Bennett,” said Anderson. 

    On Sunday, just in time for baseball season, Anderson presented the helmet to Bennett on the three bases of Target Field before the Twins game against Detroit. Then, Bennett ran to the home plate wearing his new helmet to mark the honorary first run of the game.

    It was a day that meant so much to the entire Fisk family, including Bennett’s dad, Joe.

    “I’m so proud of him, this is awesome. It feels great, it really does,” said Joe Fisk. 

    Bennett celebrates what makes him different, and hopes this moment is just the beginning of a long lifetime on the baseball diamond.

    “It means a lot because now I get to be unique,” said Fisk, “because then I ‘m not like everyone else and I can be my own person.”

    Gillette Children’s is already working on another specialized, custom sports equipment project for another child with a similar need in the Midwest. 

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    Marielle Mohs

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  • Angels place 3B Anthony Rendon (hamstring) on 10-day IL

    Angels place 3B Anthony Rendon (hamstring) on 10-day IL

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    (Photo credit: Jonathan Dyer-USA TODAY Sports)

    The Los Angeles Angels placed Anthony Rendon on the 10-day injured list Sunday due to a left hamstring strain, adding another chapter to the third baseman’s checkered medical history with the team.

    Rendon, 33, came up limping after legging out an infield hit to open the Angels’ game against the host Cincinnati Reds on Saturday.

    He left the game, with his single raising his batting average to .267 with no home runs, three RBIs and three stolen bases in 19 games. Rendon opened the season by going 0-for-19 in five games before batting .357 (20-for-56) over his last 14 games.

    “(I’m feeling) not too great,” Rendon said after the game. “Frustration. Anger. Mad. Any of those adjectives you want to use.”

    He said it’s frustrating to be hurt now that he’s heating up at the plate.

    “I’m starting to barrel the ball more, and when I didn’t, I was just starting to find holes,” Rendon said. “Like earlier in the season, I was barreling it and they were catching it. I think that’s the most frustrating part, I was getting into a groove and, of course, this happens.”

    Rendon has not played more than 58 games in a season due to a variety of injuries and the COVID-19 pandemic since signing a seven-year, $245 million contract with the Angels.

    Rendon was an All-Star while playing for the Washington Nationals in 2019. He finished as high as third in the National League MVP voting in 2019. That season, he set career highs with a .319 batting average, 34 homers and 126 RBIs, the latter leading the majors along with 44 doubles.

    For his career, Rendon is batting .283 with 158 homers and 660 RBIs in 1,135 games.

    In a corresponding move Sunday, the Angels selected the contract of veteran infielder Ehire Adrianza from Triple-A Salt Lake.

    Adrianza, 34, batted .238 in 616 career games for the San Francisco Giants (2013-16), Minnesota Twins (2017-20), Atlanta Braves (2021-22, 2023) and Nationals (2022).

    In another move, right-hander Robert Stephenson. 31, was transferred to the 60-day IL on Sunday. The team had announced Thursday that he will undergo season-ending elbow surgery later this month.

    Stephenson, who had signed a three-year contract worth $33 million in January, was placed on the IL on March 28.

    –Field Level Media

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  • Sunshine, seasonable temps make Sunday a #Top10WxDay

    Sunshine, seasonable temps make Sunday a #Top10WxDay

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    NEXT Weather: 11 a.m. report for Minnesota from April 21, 2024


    NEXT Weather: 11 a.m. report for Minnesota from April 21, 2024

    03:43

    MINNEAPOLIS — Sunday’s sunny skies and seasonable temperatures are enough to make it a #Top10WxDay.

    After a chilly morning, winds will calm down and highs will climb close to 60 for most of the state.

    2d813d2c9f297a1fd1d416b97d5db447.jpg

    WCCO


    Rain will return Monday, with a chance for widespread showers in the afternoon. Those showers could linger on and off through Tuesday.

    Wednesday and Thursday will be quiet before another system brings more rain at the end of the week.

    Highs will stay in the 50s and 60s this week.

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    Adam Del Rosso

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  • NBA roundup: Knicks rally for 1-0 series lead vs. 76ers

    NBA roundup: Knicks rally for 1-0 series lead vs. 76ers

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    (Photo credit: Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports)

    Miles McBride drained the tiebreaking basket with 8:25 left on Saturday night for the host New York Knicks, who squandered all of a 14-point third-quarter lead before rallying to beat the Philadelphia 76ers 111-104 in Game 1 of an Eastern Conference first-round playoff series.

    Game 2 is scheduledfor Monday night, also in New York. Josh Hart finished with 22 points and 13 rebounds, while Jalen Brunson also scored 22 points to go with seven rebounds and seven assists for the second-seeded Knicks.

    Tyrese Maxey scored 33 points and Joel Embiid had 29 points and eight rebounds for the seventh-seeded 76ers.

    Embiid left the game with 2:37 remaining before halftime after making a thunderous dunk and collapsing to the floor after appearing to hurt his left knee. He returned to start the second half, however, and Philadelphia coach Nick Nurse said Embiid would be re-evaluated after the game.

    Nuggets 114, Lakers 103

    Nikola Jokic had 32 points and 12 rebounds and host Denver opened its NBA title defense with a win over Los Angeles in Game 1 of their Western Conference first-round playoff series.

    Jamal Murray finished with 22 points and 10 assists to help Denver to its ninth straight win over Los Angeles, with five of those victories coming in the postseason.

    Anthony Davis led the Lakers with 32 points, 14 rebounds and four blocked shots, and LeBron James finished with 27 points after a quiet fourth quarter. James didn’t attempt a shot in the final period until there was 1:20 left and had only four points in the final 12 minutes.

    Timberwolves 120, Suns 95

    Anthony Edwards shook off first-half foul trouble to score a game-high 33 points as Minnesota beat Phoenix in Game 1 of a Western Conference first-round playoff series in Minneapolis.

    With 3:18 left until intermission, Edwards was forced to go to the bench after picking up his third foul. But he erupted for 18 points in the third quarter, helping Minnesota turn a close game into a blowout. Game 2 is scheduled for Tuesday night, also in Minneapolis.

    Karl-Anthony Towns added 19 points, Nickeil Alexander-Walker chipped in 18 and Rudy Gobert went for 14 to go along with 16 rebounds for the Timberwolves. Kevin Durant supplied 31 points and seven boards for the Suns. Devin Booker added 18 points.

    Cavaliers 97, Magic 83

    Donovan Mitchell scored 30 points, Jarrett Allen posted 16 points and 18 rebounds and No. 4 seed Cleveland led wire-to-wire to take Game 1 of its Eastern Conference first-round playoff series against visiting Orlando.

    Cleveland scored the first six points of the contest and jumped out to an 11-point lead early, with Evan Mobley scoring eight of his 16 points less than six minutes into the game. Game 2 will be Monday night in Cleveland.

    Paolo Banchero led Orlando with 24 points, matching Shaquille O’Neal for the most by a Magic player in his first career playoff game. Banchero also had seven rebounds and five assists, but he committed nine turnovers.

    –Field Level Media

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  • First trial in Feeding Our Future federal fraud case starts Monday

    First trial in Feeding Our Future federal fraud case starts Monday

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    The first criminal trial in the sprawling Feeding Our Future case is about to start, more than two years after the FBI raided the nonprofit’s offices and publicly revealed allegations of a $250 million fraud.

    Prosecutors have called it one of the largest pandemic-related fraud cases in the country and one of the largest such federal cases in state history.

    Beginning Monday in downtown Minneapolis, U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel will convene the first joint trial in the case, which could last up to six weeks and involves seven defendants who were part of the first charges in September 2022.

    The six men and one woman had ties to Empire Cuisine & Market in Shakopee, which enrolled in federal meal programs to feed needy children in April 2020. Collectively, the defendants received more than $40 million in federal reimbursements for claiming to serve more than 18 million meals to children across Minnesota — from Owatonna to Faribault to Savage — over the course of 18 months. They’ve been charged with wire fraud and money laundering, among other charges.

    Defense attorneys have said in court documents that the defendants didn’t knowingly or intentionally commit any crime or defraud anyone, arguing that they believed they were providing “real meals, to real people.” The defendants’ attorneys either declined to comment for this article or didn’t return messages.

    Overall, the case centers on U.S. Department of Agriculture-funded meal programs meant to feed low-income kids after school or during the summer. Across Minnesota, hundreds of meal distribution sites were overseen by “sponsors,” like Feeding Our Future and others. Prosecutors have said defendants exploited loosened oversight and rules during the pandemic and submitted fake invoices that grossly inflated the number of meals served.

    Instead, prosecutors allege defendants served little or no food, and used the federal money to buy lakeside houses, luxury cars and lavish trips.

    “This is an extremely unique case,” said Minneapolis attorney Joe Tamburino, who isn’t involved. “It’s a huge amount of money. Additionally, this was at a very vulnerable time for our whole country … at the height of the pandemic.”

    The case is also unusual for the number of people involved and the volume of court files. Since September 2022, 70 people have been charged or indicted and of those, 18 have pleaded guilty, one died and one is known to have fled the country. The grand jury has issued more than 600 subpoenas and there’s more than 2.8 million pages of evidence, 40 hours of recordings, 10,000 files and eight terabytes of camera footage in the case, according to court documents.

    Tamburino added that he’s not surprised it’s taken more than a year and a half since charges were filed for the first trial to start because of the extent of the allegations. “With this many defendants, I think you could see some twists and turns.”

    Joint trial starts Monday

    This week’s trial involves: Abdiaziz Shafii Farah, who was 33 and living in Savage when he was charged; Mohamed Jama Ismail, 51, who was living in Savage; Abdimajid Mohamed Nur, 23, who was living in Shakopee; Said Shafii Farah, who was 40 and living in Minneapolis; Abdiwahab Maalim Aftin, who was 32 and living in Minneapolis; Mukhtar Mohamed Shariff, who was 31 and living in Bloomington; and Hayat Mohamed Nur, 27, who was living in Eden Prairie. Their organizations were sponsored by Feeding Our Future in St. Anthony and Partners in Nutrition in St. Paul.

    • Abdiaziz Farah and Ismail owned Empire Cuisine, a Shakopee restaurant that started in April 2020 and claimed to feed thousands of kids at a dozen or more sites and act as a food vendor for nearly 50 sites, prosecutors said.
    • Mahad Ibrahim, who was slated to go to trial Monday until it was postponed due to his attorneys being unavailable, ran Edina-based ThinkTechAct and Mind Foundry, and worked with Abdiaziz Farah, opening more than two dozen food sites statewide, from Willmar to Owatonna.
    • Aftin and Said Farah, the brother of Abdiaziz Farah, created Bushra Wholesalers, a food distribution company for Empire Cuisine, ThinkTechAct and other entities, in 2021.
    • Shariff, CEO of Afrique Hospitality Group, which started in 2021, operated a food distribution site in Bloomington and received funds from Empire and ThinkTechAct.
    • Prosecutors say Abdimajid Nur and his sister Hayat Nur created fake and fraudulent meal count sheets, invoices and attendance rosters.

    The defendants used shell companies and payments to one another, such as for “consulting” fees, to launder the money, prosecutors said, or to pay bribes and kickbacks to others as part of what prosecutors said was a “pay-to-play” scheme.

    For instance, prosecutors said Abdiaziz Farah used $1 million to write out a cashier’s check for two lakefront lots on Prior Lake to build an 8,000-square-foot house.

    Abdiaziz Farah and Ismail applied for new passports after theirs were seized by the FBI and have been charged with making false statements on their applications. Ismail, who was arrested before boarding a flight in 2022, has pleaded guilty to that passport charge.

    Rise in meal programs

    Prosecutors have said in court documents that the trial will show how defendants operated “sham food sites” across Minnesota and quickly expanded the fraud scheme.

    They wrote that they’ll show e-mails, travel documents, financial data and other records, and could call property managers, landlords and neighbors to testify that it would’ve been impossible to serve thousands of meals at parks or apartment complexes.

    “Many of their purported food ‘sites’ were nothing more than inhospitable parking lots or derelict commercial spaces,” prosecutors wrote.

    Defense attorneys wrote in court documents that they’ll present invoices, cell phone records, checks and other documents to prove that the defendants didn’t knowingly defraud the government.

    This week’s trial precedes the one that will involve Feeding Our Future leader Aimee Bock, which could take place later this year or next year.

    Bock, who is white, has denied any wrongdoing, including denying that she received a kickback from a meal provider. She has said state leaders targeted her organization because the nonprofit worked largely with African immigrants and other people of color. In December, her attorney Kenneth Udoibok said in court filings that Bock didn’t receive kickbacks and, even if she did, kickbacks aren’t inherently fraudulent. He said Feeding Our Future charged an administrative fee to its sites, which is legal.

    During the pandemic, the meal food programs ballooned, with Feeding Our Future growing to become one of the largest sponsors in Minnesota. In 2021, it received nearly $200 million, up from $3.4 million in 2019, while Partners in Nutrition received more than $200 million, up from $5.6 million in 2019.

    What happens in this month’s first trial could foreshadow or affect the other trials of bigger players in the scheme, said Joseph Daly, emeritus professor of law at Mitchell Hamline School of Law. But it’s going to be a complex case for the jury and public to follow, with so many people involved and so many financial documents. More than 500 potential witnesses have been listed by prosecutors and defense attorneys.

    Prosecutors will also have a difficult task to prove that defendants knew that they were defrauding the government, he said.

    “It’s not a slam dunk case at all [for federal prosecutors],” he said. Fraud cases are “hard to prove.”

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    Kelly Smith

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  • 4/20 grew from humble roots to marijuana’s high holiday

    4/20 grew from humble roots to marijuana’s high holiday

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    SEATTLE – Saturday marks marijuana culture’s high holiday, 4/20, when college students gather – at 4:20 p.m. – in clouds of smoke on campus quads and pot shops in legal-weed states thank their customers with discounts.

    This year’s edition provides an occasion for activists to reflect on how far their movement has come, with recreational pot now allowed in nearly half the states and the nation’s capital. Many states have instituted “social equity” measures to help communities of color, harmed the most by the drug war, reap financial benefits from legalization. And the White House has shown an openness to marijuana reform.

    Here’s a look at 4/20’s history:

    WHY 4/20?

    The origins of the date, and the term “420” generally, were long murky. Some claimed it referred to a police code for marijuana possession or that it derived from Bob Dylan’s “Rainy Day Women No. 12 & 35,” with its refrain of “Everybody must get stoned” – 420 being the product of 12 times 35.

    But the prevailing explanation is that it started in the 1970s with a group of bell-bottomed buddies from San Rafael High School, in California’s Marin County north of San Francisco, who called themselves “the Waldos.” A friend’s brother was afraid of getting busted for a patch of cannabis he was growing in the woods at nearby Point Reyes, so he drew a map and gave the teens permission to harvest the crop, the story goes.

    During fall 1971, at 4:20 p.m., just after classes and football practice, the group would meet up at the school’s statue of chemist Louis Pasteur, smoke a joint and head out to search for the weed patch. They never did find it, but their private lexicon – “420 Louie” and later just “420” – would take on a life of its own.

    The Waldos saved postmarked letters and other artifacts from the 1970s referencing “420,” which they now keep in a bank vault, and when the Oxford English Dictionary added the term in 2017, it cited some of those documents as the earliest recorded uses.

    HOW DID 420 SPREAD?

    A brother of one of the Waldos was a close friend of Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh, as Lesh once confirmed in an interview with the Huffington Post, now HuffPost. The Waldos began hanging out in the band’s circle and the slang spread.

    FILE – The Waldos, from left, Mark Gravitch, Larry Schwartz, Dave Reddix, Jeffrey Noel and Steve Capper sit on a wall they used to frequent at San Rafael High School in San Rafael, California, April 13, 2018.

    Fast-forward to the early 1990s: Steve Bloom, a reporter for the cannabis magazine High Times, was at a Dead show when he was handed a flyer urging people to “meet at 4:20 on 4/20 for 420-ing in Marin County at the Bolinas Ridge sunset spot on Mt. Tamalpais.” High Times published it.

    “It’s a phenomenon,” one of the Waldos, Steve Capper, now 69, once told The Associated Press. “Most things die within a couple years, but this just goes on and on. It’s not like someday somebody’s going to say, ‘OK, cannabis New Year’s is on June 23rd now.’”

    While the Waldos came up with the term, the people who made the flier distributed at the Dead show – and effectively turned 4/20 into a holiday – remain unknown.

    HOW IS IT CELEBRATED?

    With weed, naturally.

    Some celebrations are bigger than others: The Mile High 420 Festival in Denver, for example, typically draws thousands and describes itself as the largest free 4/20 event in the world. Hippie Hill in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park has also attracted massive crowds, but the gathering was canceled this year, with organizers citing a lack of financial sponsorship and city budget cuts.

    College quads and statehouse lawns are also known for drawing 4/20 celebrations, with the University of Colorado Boulder historically among the largest, though not so much since administrators banned the annual smokeout over a decade ago.

    Some breweries make beers that are 420-themed, but not laced, including SweetWater Brewing in Atlanta, which is throwing a 420 music festival this weekend and whose founders went to the University of Colorado.

    Lagunitas Brewing in Petaluma, California, releases its “Waldos’ Special Ale” every year on 4/20 in partnership with the term’s coiners. That’s where the Waldos will be this Saturday to sample the beer, for which they picked out “hops that smell and taste like the dankest marijuana,” one Waldo, Dave Reddix, said via email.

    4/20 has also become a big industry event, with vendors gathering to try each other’s wares.

    FILE - Patrons smoke marijuana at Lowell's Original Cannabis Cafe, a legal marijuana establishment, in Los Angeles, Nov. 13, 2019 FILE – Patrons smoke marijuana at Lowell’s Original Cannabis Cafe, a legal marijuana establishment, in Los Angeles, Nov. 13, 2019

    THE POLITICS

    The number of states allowing recreational marijuana has grown to 24 after recent legalization campaigns succeeded in Ohio, Minnesota and Delaware. Fourteen more states allow it for medical purposes, including Kentucky, where medical marijuana legislation that passed last year will take effect in 2025. Additional states permit only products with low THC, marijuana’s main psychoactive ingredient, for certain medical conditions.

    But marijuana is still illegal under federal law. It is listed with drugs such as heroin under Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, meaning it has no federally accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.

    The Biden administration, however, has taken some steps toward marijuana reform. The president has pardoned thousands of people who were convicted of “simple possession” on federal land and in the District of Columbia.

    The Department of Health and Human Services last year recommended to the Drug Enforcement Administration that marijuana be reclassified as Schedule III, which would affirm its medical use under federal law.

    According to a Gallup poll last fall, 70% of adults support legalization, the highest level yet recorded by the polling firm and more than double the roughly 30% who backed it in 2000.

    Vivian McPeak, who helped found Seattle’s Hempfest more than three decades ago, reflected on the extent to which the marijuana industry has evolved during his lifetime.

    “It’s surreal to drive by stores that are selling cannabis,” he said. “A lot of people laughed at us, saying, ‘This will never happen.’”

    WHAT DOES IT MEAN?

    McPeak described 4/20 these days as a “mixed bag.” Despite the legalization movement’s progress, many smaller growers are struggling to compete against large producers, he said, and many Americans are still behind bars for weed convictions.

    “We can celebrate the victories that we’ve had, and we can also strategize and organize to further the cause,” he said. “Despite the kind of complacency that some people might feel, we still got work to do. We’ve got to keep burning that shoe leather until we get everybody out of jails and prisons.”

    For the Waldos, 4/20 signifies above all else a good time.

    “We’re not political. We’re jokesters,” Capper has said. “But there was a time that we can’t forget, when it was secret, furtive. … The energy of the time was more charged, more exciting in a certain way.

    “I’m not saying that’s all good – it’s not good they were putting people in jail,” he continued. “You wouldn’t want to go back there.”

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  • Clay Squared Gallery Announces Grand Opening, May 10 – Minneapolis Riverfront News – Minneapolis Riverfront Neighborhoods.

    Clay Squared Gallery Announces Grand Opening, May 10 – Minneapolis Riverfront News – Minneapolis Riverfront Neighborhoods.

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    Image: ReUse On the Range, mixed media sculpture by Layl McDill, 55″x100″x9″, 2023

    Grand Opening May 10, 6:00 – 8:00pm

    Mixed media sculptor Layl McDill is expanding her gallery and studio. The newly renovated storefront space at Lowry and Monroe will showcase Layl’s sculptures of all sizes and shapes. The Grand Opening is May 10 from 6:00 to 8:00pm. There will be door prizes and snacks, and an opportunity to play with some clay, too! 

    Check out her latest teapots that have transformed into birds and whimsical worlds. Take your time searching the bead collection to find just the perfect grouping for a personalized bracelet. You’ll also find a life-size bison made of found objects and polymer clay! 

    The new gallery space (above) will be open Monday-Saturday from 12:00 to 5:00p, or by appointment or chance. Direct entrance is located at Monroe and Lowry, or enter at the main entrance of the Flux Arts Building, 2505 Howard Street NE (below).

    Also open in the Flux Arts Building will be: Clay Squared to Infinity tile showroom and studio, Art to Change the World and Potek Glass.

    Clay Squared Gallery will also be offering classes, parties and workshops in this new space. With several newly trained instructors, classes will be offered regularly. You will learn amazing magical techniques and then create a finished project such as a vase, frame or switchplate cover. Take it home and bake it in your own oven or let Clay Squared bake it for you. 

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    Kim Eslinger

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  • Homeless adults were turned away from Hennepin County’s shelter system 4,000 times in 2023 for lack of space

    Homeless adults were turned away from Hennepin County’s shelter system 4,000 times in 2023 for lack of space

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    Hennepin County’s emergency shelter system didn’t have enough space last year for everyone who needed it. More than 4,000 times in 2023, a person called the shelter hotline to reserve a bed for the night only to be told everything was booked, or that they weren’t eligible to stay in a shelter because they had previously violated the rules.

    Still, shelter beds were used more than 167,700 times during the same period. And homeless single adults were turned away far fewer times last year than in 2022, when there were 7,000 turn-aways.

    “It’s positive to see it trending in a direction that the system is better able to meet people’s needs in real time,” said David Hewitt, director of housing stability for Hennepin County. “The last few years have been pretty tumultuous years economically and socially, and that creates its own variation in terms of how many people are falling into housing crisis at any given time.”

    Hewitt credits the county’s investments in case managers, who help people surmount complex barriers to obtaining housing on their own, for the decline in turn-aways. From 2021 to 2023, Hennepin saw a 57% increase in the number of people leaving homelessness and finding permanent housing, he said. By the end of 2023, the number of people that the county had identified as chronically homeless — not having a home for at least a year and having a disability — dipped below 300 for the first time since the county started tracking the population in 2017.

    Moving people who had been living in emergency shelter for years into housing has freed up beds for the short-term stays that shelters were designed for, Hewitt said. A new diversion hotline run by Catholic Charities Twin Cities has also helped prevent shelters from overflowing.

    Launched in January 2023, the Hennepin Shelter Hotline is the number anyone experiencing homelessness can call. On the other end of the line are Catholic Charities operators who identify people entering homelessness for the first time and try to help them find creative ways to stay out of the shelter system.

    Alanna Hinz-Sweeney, who oversees the program, says operators will mediate with landlords and help people resolve conflicts with relatives, arrange transportation and offer gift cards for food or air mattress rentals if that will make it easier for a friend to take them in. Victims of domestic violence get connected with the Day One statewide program. If someone is on the verge of being evicted, the operator can refer them to rent assistance and tenant advocacy organizations. If shelter ends up being the only option, they’re transferred to the reservation system.

    “As the caller is telling their story, our staffers are really actively listening for solutions the person may share but maybe they haven’t realized it because they’re in crisis,” said Hinz-Sweeney. “Sometimes as we’re talking through the situation, they’ll come to the resolution because they just needed someone to be that sounding board and to listen non-judgmentally.”

    The calls can take the better part of an hour, but about 80% of callers call just one time, Hinz-Sweeney said, indicating that diversion is working.

    As the shelter system continues to redesign itself incrementally to better serve people experiencing homelessness, people are still falling through the cracks. Numerous encampments dot Minneapolis neighborhoods, and it isn’t hard to find people living in tents who have had negative, even traumatic, experiences with shelters in years past.

    Jorge Grijalva, who was living with his girlfriend of eight years in a yurt at 2839 14th Av. S. as of Wednesday, said he’s called the shelter reservation line many times to find that the only beds available were at Salvation Army Harbor Light in downtown Minneapolis, where men and women are separated on different floors. His girlfriend struggles in shelters and has been kicked out of them before, so they prefer to stick together. First Covenant Church, operated by Agate Housing, takes couples, but space has always been limited, Grijalva said.

    “It’s hard to get into,” he said.

    Chris Rabideau, another encampment resident, said his younger brother had just been accepted into the Homeward Bound shelter, operated by the American Indian Community Development Corporation, after trying to get a placement there for weeks, a process complicated by his brother’s lack of a phone.

    People who are turned away from Hennepin County’s shelter system during the day after all beds are reserved can try again in the evening in case there are no-shows. But Rabideau said he prefers to camp outdoors, despite the constant threat of sweeps, because waiting around all day on the chance that he might reserve a shelter bed one night at a time feels less certain to him than pitching a tent.

    “If you have a chance of getting rejected, I won’t go waste my time,” he said. “Why go waste hours when you’re not guaranteed a spot?”

    Anyone experiencing homelessness can call the Hennepin Shelter Hotline at 612-204-8200.

    Star Tribune data editor MaryJo Webster contributed to this report.

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    Susan Du

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  • Public is Invited to the Annual MPD 1st Precinct Open House, May 14 – Minneapolis Riverfront News – Minneapolis Riverfront Neighborhoods.

    Public is Invited to the Annual MPD 1st Precinct Open House, May 14 – Minneapolis Riverfront News – Minneapolis Riverfront Neighborhoods.

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    Thanks to our community partners, whose support makes Mill City Times possible:

    MILL CITY FARMERS MARKET

    With over 100 local farmers, food makers and artists, MCFM strives to build a local, sustainable and organic food economy in a vibrant, educational marketplace.

    Visit their website…

    HENNEPIN HISTORY MUSEUM

    Hennepin History Museum is your history, your museum. We preserve and share the diverse stories of Hennepin County, MN. Come visit!

    Visit their website…

    MEET MINNEAPOLIS

    Maximizing the visitor experience of Minneapolis for the economic benefit of our community, making Minneapolis the destination of choice among travelers.

    Visit their website…

    MSP FILM SOCIETY

    Promoting the art of film as a medium that fosters cross-cultural understanding, education, entertainment, and exploration.

    Visit their website…

    GREAT RIVER COALITION

    Enhancing the Minneapolis riverfront environment—for people and pollinators.

    Visit their website…

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    Kim Eslinger

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  • Lester Prairie Police Chief works to keep people safe in his community and on the court

    Lester Prairie Police Chief works to keep people safe in his community and on the court

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    LESTER PRAIRIE, Minn. — Bob Carlson has been Lester Prairie’s police chief for over two decades, but when he’s off the clock, you can find him courtside, still keeping people safe.

    “In my occupation, I deal with some of the worst things. We deal with suicides, we deal with people on some of their worst days,” Carlson said. 

    RELATED: Timberwolves play Suns in first round of playoffs: What you need to know

    He’s served the roughly 2,000 members of his community for 22 years. But in the last eight, he’s tried to take his talents in law enforcement and marry them to another job that brings him nothing but joy.

    In 2016, he started working as security with the Twins at Target Field and within the last two years, he joined the Timberwolves security team at Target Center.

    He joined the Wolves at the right time, getting to witness this team play at their peak. And it’s come with some perks, like seeing more big names courtside. And an unexpected perk: he recently got his own jersey.

    In March, Carlson and five others were honored for their hard work making the fan experience safe and fun.

    “I was just blown away because i was like – just do my job! What is this ya know?” he said.

    MORE: Timberwolves playoff run may help revive foot traffic in downtown Minneapolis

    It takes Carlson nearly an hour to get from Lester Prairie to Target Center and sometimes working back-to-back shifts. But to him the drive is worth it.

    “I remember one day I was arresting someone on a domestic and then hours later I was at Target Center enjoying watching one of the best basketball teams play. So it’s nice to be able to go to something that’s tough to something that’s fun to do,” he said.

    The countdown clock is on for Carlson retirement. In a year, he’ll be exclusively making sure Twins and Wolves are safe every year.

    “I plan on doing that until they tell me I can’t do it anymore,” he said.

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    Marielle Mohs

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  • Seasonable temps for the weekend, calm winds

    Seasonable temps for the weekend, calm winds

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    NEXT Weather: Morning report on April 20, 2024


    NEXT Weather: Morning report on April 20, 2024

    03:19

    MINNEAPOLIS — High pressure will move in for the weekend, bringing in some sun and calmer winds, culminating in a #Top10WxDay on Sunday.

    There’s still a potential for frost on both Saturday and Sunday mornings, as overnight lows will be in the 30s. High temps struggle to hit 50 degrees on Saturday, but will climb near 60 on Sunday.

    Sunday will see seasonable temps and calm winds, making it perfect for a #Top10WxDay.

    snapshot-7.jpg

    WCCO


    Afterwards, there is a widespread chance some showers arrive on Monday afternoon. However, the rest of the week looks seasonable with highs near 60.

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    Adam Del Rosso

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  • Twins hope to break 5-game skid in rematch with Tigers

    Twins hope to break 5-game skid in rematch with Tigers

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    (Photo credit: Brian Bradshaw Sevald-USA TODAY Sports)

    Thanks to the Friday heroics of rookie Wenceel Perez, the Detroit Tigers will look for back-to-back wins over the Minnesota Twins when the teams meet Saturday afternoon in Minneapolis.

    Detroit earned a 5-4 victory against the Twins in the series opener when Perez drove in the tiebreaking run witha ninth-inning single up the middle.

    Perez, 24, finished the game with two RBIs — the first two of his big-league career.

    Meanwhile, Minnesota will try to stop a five-game losing streak. It has been a turbulent start for the Twins, who have lost 12 of their first 18 games.

    “We’ve had plenty of hard games so far in a short period of time here,” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said after his team’s latest loss. “We had plenty of opportunities to get stuff going and close out innings and play cleaner baseball.

    “I sit there toward the end of the game and I’m like, there’s a lot of things I can look at — and I think anyone watching the game can look at — that we can just do better and put ourselves in a position to win.”

    Tigers right-hander Reese Olson (0-2, 3.86 ERA) will make his fourth start of the season on Saturday. The 24-year-old went 5-7 with a 3.99 ERA in 21 games (18 starts) as a rookie for Detroit last season.

    Olson took a tough-luck loss in his most recent outing. He limited the Texas Rangers to one run on six hits in 6 1/3 innings on Monday, and he walked just one while striking out eight. The Tigers, however, managed just five hits and lost 1-0.

    “We just didn’t get the big hit,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said after that game. “Our pitchers were sensational, but the big hit is key in a one-run game.”

    In three career starts against Minnesota, all of them last season, Olson is 2-0 with a 3.21 ERA.

    Twins right-hander Bailey Ober (0-1, 6.57 ERA) also will look for his first win of the 2024 campaign. The 6-foot-9, 260-pound hurler has struggled after a strong 2023 season in which he went 8-6 with a 3.43 ERA in 26 starts for Minnesota.

    Ober recorded his first quality start of the season in his most recent outing, which came in Detroit on Sunday. He pitched six scoreless innings, allowing three hits, walking none and striking out three.

    The 28-year-old has made eight career starts against Detroit. He is 1-2 with a 4.61 ERA in those games, with nine walks and 42 strikeouts in 41 innings.

    The Tigers could be without veteran third baseman Gio Urshela, who left the Friday game because of right hamstring tightness after grounding out in the second inning.

    After the game, Hinch said of Urshela, “It didn’t look good. I thought he was running a little funny down to first, and then when he got to first and then bent over, I had a little pit in my stomach. He’s going to get evaluated. I’m never really optimistic on those type of injuries with his hammy.”

    Urshela is hitting .298 (17-for-57) with two doubles and six RBIs through 18 games in his first season with the Tigers. He also has played for five other teams, including the Twins, with whom he hit .285 with 13 homers and 64 RBIs in 144 games in 2022.

    –Field Level Media

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  • Review: Country star Kane Brown disappoints at Target Center

    Review: Country star Kane Brown disappoints at Target Center

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    Descending from the light rigging high above the scene, Kane Brown hovered over the stage on a small platform to kick off his concert Friday night at a packed Target Center.

    That’s similar to the way the country superstar launched his show 27 months ago at the same arena. Only this time, the outfit and the song were different: Instead of a Timberwolves jersey, Brown opted for a stylish black jacket with stripes made of fancy string and no ballcap. And the song was “Bury Me in Georgia,” a stomping chant delivered with Brown’s unmistakable buzzing baritone.

    The outfit and the opener weren’t the only things different. Brown’s performance was louder and slicker, less personal and appealing than 2022′s terrific concert. And Friday’s encore-less, seemingly rushed effort was remarkably short, at only 75 minutes.

    What was missing most of all was the 30-year-old injecting his story, personality and humanity into the show. Last time, on his first arena headlining tour, he shared his compelling and revealing backstory in conversation. The Tennessee-reared singer talked about wetting his bed at age 6, which resulted in his stepfather roughing him up and grandma turning in the abuser to authorities. He spoke about being the only person of color in his mom’s family (he’s biracial) and meeting his older siblings when he was 16.

    Two years ago, he discussed growing up poor in trailer parks, wearing his water shoes to play basketball and attending seven different high schools. He recalled placing first and second in a high school talent show and giving his winnings ($75) to his mom.

    And last time, he got emotional thinking about his two daughters. This time, he mentioned his wife, Katelyn, only because she wasn’t in attendance to sing their hit duet “Thank God.” Her voice materialized via recording. After the song, Brown frowned. “It’s always a sad song to sing when she’s not here,” he said.

    That was about as personal as he got all night.

    Brown specializes in sentimental ballads like “Good as You,” which was delivered on a small stage at the back of the arena, and “Heaven,” a pretty celebration of love that was the penultimate piece Friday. While those were smartly understated, his rendition of “Georgia on My Mind” — which he said he recorded for the recent Masters golf tournament — found the inviting intimacy of his croon on the small stage obliterated by the too-loud band playing 70 yards away on the main stage.

    The six-man band provided plenty of power on “What Ifs,” “One Mississippi” and the kinetic “Fiddle in the Band.”

    “I’m a little bit of bass, 808s, a little bit of clap your hands / I’m a little bit of six strings on a backbeat with a fiddle in the band,” Brown sang between twangy blasts from his band on the latter number.

    Indeed, he’s one of the most open-minded and eclectic musical figures associated with country music. Not only has he collaborated with an array of country stars including Blake Shelton, Chris Young and Lauren Alaina, but EDM ace Marshmello, Latin pop star Camila Cabello and R&B stalwarts Khalid, H.E.R. and John Legend, to name a few.

    On Friday, Brown offered his Marshmello number “One Thing Right” as well as his duet with rapper Blackbear, “Memory,” and his Young collab “Famous Friends,” with opening acts Parmalee and Tyler Hubbard joining in on the party tune.

    Brown, whose fourth album is due this year, introduced one new number, “Haunted,” about struggling with depression. He said it was going to be his new single until two days ago; he didn’t elaborate. The alluring selection was enveloped in flame throwers, fireworks and a ponderous electric guitar solo.

    After closing with the honky-tonk boogie and buzzing rock guitar of “Like I Love Country Music,” Brown reprised what he did last time at Target Center: Stripped off his tank top, tossed it to the crowd and exited.

    Opening act Hubbard has been on a hot streak since he left the blockbuster duo Florida Georgia Line a couple of years ago. The Georgia native, 37, has landed a trio of tunes in the top-three slots on Billboard’s country chart. But the well-crafted material he played Friday was geared more to the radio than an arena. During his 45-minute set, Hubbard connected with the crowd only on the Florida Georgia Line crossover smash “Cruise” and his own breezy bop “Dancin’ in the Country.”

    Kicking off the night was Parmalee, a North Carolina quartet with three No. 1 country hits on its résumé. But the group needed to offer Usher’s “Yeah” to spice up their bland country-pop set.

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    Jon Bream

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  • Former sheriff paid for damaged guardrail, SUV using taxpayer-funded workers compensation settlement

    Former sheriff paid for damaged guardrail, SUV using taxpayer-funded workers compensation settlement

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    Former sheriff’s damaged county-owned SUV was paid for by settlement funds, documents say


    Former sheriff’s damaged county-owned SUV was paid for by settlement funds, documents say

    02:12

    MINNEAPOLIS — Hennepin County reached a settlement last year paying former Hennepin County Sheriff Dave Hutchinson $240,000. Hutchinson used some of that money to pay for a vehicle and guardrail he destroyed in 2021.

    Prosecutors say then-Sheriff David Hutchinson was drunk when he hit 126 miles-per-hour and rolled a county-owned car. The wrecked SUV cost $40,961.69. The guardrail cost $6,351.07.

    RELATED: Dave Hutchinson, former Hennepin County sheriff, fired by Metro Transit police after regaining job

    Newly released documents show that nearly $47,000 was deducted from his $240,000 taxpayer-funded workers’ compensation settlement, signed in November 2023.

    Current Hennepin County Sheriff Dawanna Witt and six other current and former employees filed a lawsuit last week alleging toxic workplace behavior including allegedly making “racist caricatures,” and leaving co-workers fearing “workplace violence.”

    MORE NEWS: Business impacts of Hennepin Avenue construction vary, depending on who you ask

    A spokesperson for Hennepin County pushed back on the lawsuit saying they worked hard to address concerns.

    A spokesperson also said the county took prompt action once they were alerted to these claims against the former sheriff. Hutchinson chose not to run for re-election and his term ended last year.

    Former Sheriff Hutchinson couldn’t be reached for comment.  

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    Ubah Ali

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  • Fired South High math teacher accuses Minneapolis Public Schools management of ‘cancerous rot’

    Fired South High math teacher accuses Minneapolis Public Schools management of ‘cancerous rot’

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    South High School administrators refused to accurately report student misconduct to Minneapolis Public Schools and retaliated against a math teacher who repeatedly pressed for better documentation and solutions to rampant misbehavior and drug use in her classroom, the ousted educator alleges.

    Becka Thompson, who was officially fired Tuesday over “inappropriate communication,” called administrative mismanagement a “cancerous rot” in Minnesota’s fourth-largest school district. She first used the term during a school board meeting, then again in an interview.

    Thompson claimed her termination was in retaliation for her repeated calls for South High administrators to report violent incidents on campus to the central office.

    “There’s a double standard at South, and I was trying to make sure there was a singular standard,” Thompson said in an interview. “The more I tried to talk with people and rectify the situation, the more pushback I got.”

    She was hired in 2022 to teach English language learners. That’s the same year Principal Afolabi Runsewe took over for Steve Simondet.

    Thompson was hired by a vice principal who left South High shortly after Runsewe was hired. She said Runsewe routinely dismissed her pleas for administrators to document violent and disruptive student behavior. He also refused to answer Thompson’s questions about school policies, communication platforms and other issues, she claimed.

    Thompson said Runsewe would respond to her questions with, “I didn’t hire you.”

    District officials said employees can report harassment and discrimination through Minneapolis Public Schools’ online portal. They may also flag issues with their union steward, which Thompson did, or speak with the district’s ombudsperson.

    District officials did not answer questions about Thompson’s specific claims and Runsewe did not respond to a request for comment. The agenda for the Minneapolis school board’s Tuesday meeting shows that one special education teacher’s contract was suggested for non-renewal on the same day Thompson said she was fired.

    Thompson was elected to represent District 2 on the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board in 2021, a role Thompson discussed with school leaders when she was hired at South. But Runsewe took issue with those duties, Thompson said, and suggested she reconsider continuing in the elected role while working at South.

    A disciplinary letter Thompson received in November noted absences associated with her role as one of three “areas of concern.” Thompson said she tried to discuss her schedule with Runsewe to no avail.

    School leaders also accused Thompson of leaving lackluster lesson plans for substitute teachers and reprimanded her for locking her classroom door. Thompson said administrators never asked for photos or screenshots of her lesson plans.

    Thompson said she locked the classroom door because students who weren’t enrolled in the class would regularly walk in and interrupt.

    “It was a way to help protect the learning environment,” she said. “If you don’t create a safe space to learn, kids won’t learn.”

    Administrators told her the classroom doors should remain unlocked to foster a welcoming atmosphere. Officials didn’t say whether district policy requires educators to keep their doors unlocked.

    It was especially tough to educate students learning English, many of them new to the country, during those disruptions, Thompson said, adding that she had difficulty explaining why her pupils shouldn’t break rules that others disregard completely.

    She also tried to report fights and other violent incidents on campus but said her claims fell on deaf ears. Thompson also said students would deal drugs on campus and she’d notice some wander the halls while they were high.

    Thompson wanted to send detailed reports to central administrators in the district offices but said she was regularly rebuffed by administrators at South. They accused her of wanting to punish the school’s predominantly Black and brown students.

    Each student group makes up about one-third of South’s enrollment, according to state Department of Education data.

    “It was not a punishment mentality,” Thompson said. “It was about documentation.”

    Thompson stressed that she didn’t blame students for the disruptive behavior and interruptions that plagued her time at South. She believes administrators were reluctant to document problems and act on them for fear of giving the school a bad reputation and affecting enrollment.

    The Minneapolis district has struggled to attract families, which has led to declining state funding and a budget forecast rife with cuts. Thompson believes all of those issues incentivize administrators to downplay serious problems on campus, which leaves educators with few tools or support to address disruptive behavior.

    “Believe me when I tell you that there’s a cancerous rot running right down the middle of this organization,” Thompson said.

    Minneapolis Public Schools has stationed so-called “violence interrupters” at South High and a few other campuses since February 2022. Those people help school staff supervise hallways and monitor students during end-of-day dismissal and direct them to after-school programming, district officials said in a statement.

    “These partners provide youth outreach and engagement services during part of the school day and then transition with students to out of school time,” district officials said

    Staff writer Mara Klecker contributed to this report.

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    Eder Campuzano

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  • Report: Former Minneapolis police oversight director disparaged women, threatened staff

    Report: Former Minneapolis police oversight director disparaged women, threatened staff

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    The director of a city division tasked with investigating civilian complaints against the Minneapolis Police Department resigned in February following an 8-month investigation that substantiated claims he physically intimidated staff, threatened violence and regularly demeaned female employees, according to newly released personnel records.

    The city’s Human Resource department launched the investigation less than four months after John K. Jefferson, a retired FBI agent, was appointed director of Minneapolis’ Office of Police Conduct Review (OPCR).

    A seven-page executive summary of that investigation, obtained by the Star Tribune through a public data request, outlines a litany of troubling behavior, from offensive remarks and unwanted physical contact to overt threats of violence.

    In one instance, Jefferson reportedly reenacted a police restraint by putting his hands on a female subordinate, “bending her forward without warning or consent,” according to the document.

    Witnesses corroborated that he “advanced on” employees by aggressively invading their personal space in an attempt at intimidation. He once did this to a woman, placing his face inches from hers, before demanding to know: “WHO do you work for?!”

    Jefferson also repeatedly declared that he wanted to “wipe an employee off the face of the Earth” and “throat punch” him, records show. Those comments left staff with heightened concerns about their safety, given that Jefferson often discussed how he carries a concealed weapon, though no one reported seeing one at work.

    Attempts to reach Jefferson for comment were unsuccessful Friday.

    The report, based on interviews with 17 current employees, was submitted Jan. 16, exactly one month before Jefferson’s departure. Asked why Jefferson was never placed on administrative leave during the investigation or after the report concluded that policy violations had occurred, a city spokesman said that the decision ultimately rested with his boss, then-Civil Rights Director Alberder Gillespie.

    Jefferson resigned Feb. 16 — the same day that Mayor Jacob Frey terminated Gillespie, on grounds that she was hampering the city’s efforts to reform policing in accordance with a court-approved settlement.

    City officials have long declined to comment on the nature of his exit, citing data privacy laws.

    Tasked with police review

    Jefferson, a Marine Corps. combat veteran, came out of retirement after 35 years in law enforcement to help rebuild Minneapolis’ civilian oversight apparatus in late 2022.

    The Office of Police Conduct Review — a division of the Civil Rights Department — had been without a director for more than a year and faced staffing shortages amid a mounting backlog of police misconduct complaints.

    In his new role, Jefferson was responsible for clearing that backlog and training the city’s latest iteration of a civilian oversight board, which reviews individual misconduct cases and weighs whether to recommend discipline to the police chief.

    Yet progress stalled under his leadership last fall.

    The office was failing to update its website intended to keep residents apprised about the number of complaints filed against police. It was also struggling to investigate misconduct complaints within 180 days — the time frame required under a settlement agreement between the city and the Minnesota Department of Human Rights after the police murder of George Floyd in 2020.

    And a lack of initial cooperation between Minneapolis police and OPCR delayed disciplinary decisions by the 15-member Community Commission on Police Oversight (CCPO), which reviewed only two cases in the first six months of its existence.

    At the time, Jefferson pointed to limited resources and a department restructuring as major hurdles. But longstanding frustrations with the office eventually boiled over, and by December, superiors in City Hall zeroed in on Gillespie’s oversight of the unit — and fired her.

    When City Operations Officer Margaret Anderson Kelliher stepped in as interim, she “immediately placed Jefferson on administrative leave” because the complaints against him were still pending, a city spokesman said.

    He quit hours later. The exodus of two prominent Black leaders further plunged the city’s embattled civilian review process into chaos. Amid the fallout, two CCPO members abruptly resigned, each citing Gillespie’s “politically motivated” removal among the reasons for their exit.

    The Star Tribune filed a data request to obtain personnel records for both Gillespie and Jefferson the day their employment ended. Gillespie’s documents were released within hours, unredacted. City officials took nine weeks to turn over Jefferson’s data, repeatedly declining to confirm whether there were open complaints against him at the time of his departure.

    A search remains underway for Gillespie’s permanent replacement. Kelliher appointed Carolina Amini, a former investigator in that office, as interim director of OPCR.

    Report cites ‘toxic’ environment

    Personnel records reveal some overlap in the allegations lodged against Jefferson and Gillespie, including claims that they were uncooperative with the City Attorney’s office and refused to share information with it.

    According to the documents, Jefferson forbade staff from consulting with the embedded city attorney in their office and once “chewed out” a subordinate for contacting the attorney to procure a process manual.

    One OPCR employee described a “toxic” environment, filled with paranoia about whom staff members were speaking to outside the department — even former colleagues. When one employee transferred to another city division, Jefferson began referring to the woman only as “Crazy” or “The Crazy.”

    The witness opined that Jefferson was attempting to “hide how far out of compliance” the office is with the MDHR agreement by tamping down on external communication, records show. He expressed resistance to sharing any information with Jones Day, the external law firm providing pro bono assistance in tackling the complaint backlog. A reason was never explicitly given.

    Staff members also described examples of Jefferson’s “dismissive, adversarial, belittling and unprofessional treatment” of staff, especially women.

    He routinely talked over female employees, repeated their statements and maintained “prolonged eye contact and physical proximity” that made them uncomfortable, according to the investigative summary.

    Jefferson used derogatory phrases, often spoke of “foreigners” and recounted war stories about the Middle East in front of Muslim employees, documents show. He also questioned employees’ plans to travel abroad, advised that they could be kidnapped and offered to connect them with the U.S. Embassy or an armed unit.

    As OPCR director, Jefferson was paid an annual salary of nearly $140,000 and oversaw a budget of some $2.2 million and 14 full-time employees.

    Jefferson started his law enforcement career as an Indiana state trooper in 1985 and patrolled for 12 years before joining the FBI. He initially worked on complex drug trafficking investigations targeting South American cartels but, in the aftermath of 9/11, switched his focus to counterterrorism.

    In the mid-2000s, Jefferson served in Afghanistan and Iraq alongside special forces units working to topple the Taliban and Al Qaeda. His extensive resume notes he conducted interviews at the infamous Abu Ghraib prison and later contributed to the capture of one of the FBI’s most wanted terrorists.

    Under the administration of President Barack Obama, Jefferson acted as a personal protection detail for U.S. Attorney General Eric H. Holder, Jr. and his family. He capped his federal career with a nine-year stint as coordinator of the FBI’s Office of Professional Responsibility, where he oversaw internal misconduct investigations into all employees.

    Jefferson retired in 2021. Gillespie hired him to lead OPCR the following year.

    Staff writer Dave Orrick contributed to this report.

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    Liz Sawyer

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  • Minnesota sales, clean-ups and other events to celebrate Earth Day and Arbor Day

    Minnesota sales, clean-ups and other events to celebrate Earth Day and Arbor Day

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    Several businesses and organizations are hosting events around Minnesota this weekend in honor of Earth Day, which falls on Monday.

    The Como Park Zoo and Conservatory, 1225 Estabrook Dr. in St. Paul, will host a party for the planet from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. The Children’s Theatre Company (CTC) will host interactive Story Theater sessions with its “A Year With Frog and Toad” show in the Visitor Center Lobby. CTC teaching artists will lead 30-minute story theatre sessions for people to participate in games and theatre exercises that bring the book to life.

    The Gabbert Raptor Center, 1920 Fitch Av. in St. Paul, will host a 45-minute program with its ambassador birds and a 15-minute tour of the courtyard from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday. The event costs $8 for adults and $5 for kids. The center is providing take-home raptor-advocate kits.

    Buffalo Exchange, 2727 Lyndale Av. S. in Minneapolis, is hosting a $1 Earth Day sale Saturday. Proceeds go to the Goats of Anarchy for the rescue and rehabilitation of farmed animals with disabilities. The sale is cash only.

    Green Cities Accord and the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board will host an Arbor Day event at McRae Park, 906 E. 47th St., on April 26. Guests can plant trees with the Minnesota Vikings, partake in a pickleball tournament and enjoy music from Brass Solidarity, Minneapolis South High Music Boosters, and The Arborators.

    Several organizations are also hosting their Earth Day celebrations after the holiday.

    The Department of Natural Resources is encouraging people to explore the outdoors by offering free parking on April 27 to all 74 of its state parks.

    Hoċokata Ṫi, 2300 Tiwahe Circle in Shakopee, will host its third-annual Earth Day event on April 26, where you can learn about the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community’s (SMSC) Earth-friendly initiatives from its departments and enterprises. From 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., attendees can join an environmental presentation and guided nature walk beginning at 11 a.m. The talk is led by SMSC Water Resources Scientist Jennie Sirota and Cultural Interpreter/Naturalist Michael Kurtz. The two will cover a variety of environmental topics, including how to protect avian species and water. The event is $10 and includes free admission to Hoċokata Ṫi’s public exhibit, Mdewakanton: Dwellers of the Spirit Lake.

    Clean-up events

    Several communities across the state have organized clean-up events at parks and beaches. Here are a few:

    Bloomington: Bush Lake, 7515 Izaak Walton Road W. 10 a.m.-noon Saturday.

    Columbia Heights: Columbia Heights Public Library, 3939 Central Av. NE. 9-11 am. Saturday

    Minneapolis: All cleanups on Saturday from 9:30 a.m.-noon.

    Lake Harriet Bandshell, 415 W. Lake Harriet Parkway.

    Loring Park, 1382 Willow St.

    Minnehaha Dog Park, 5399 Minnehaha Park Drive S.

    Theodore Wirth Beach, 3200 Glenwood Av.

    More locations here.

    St. Paul: All cleanups on Saturday from 9-11:30 a.m.

    Como Lakeside Pavilion, 1360 Lexington Parkway N.

    Hamline Park, 1564 Lafond Av.

    Sun Ray Library, 2105 Wilson Av.

    Yellowbird Coffee, 1168 Shelby Av.

    More locations here.

    St. Anthony: Cleanup week from April 21 to April 27. Residents can take a photo of trash they collect, provide a short description of the trash collected and share the picture to the Citizens for Sustainability Facebook page or email their photo to info@citizensforsustainability.org.

    Alex Karwowski is a University of Minnesota student reporter on assignment for the Star Tribune.

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    Alex Karwowski

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  • Wells Fargo Center in downtown Minneapolis for sale, Capella University downsizing in namesake tower

    Wells Fargo Center in downtown Minneapolis for sale, Capella University downsizing in namesake tower

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    Another downtown Minneapolis tower is on the market, this time the Wells Fargo Center as the commercial real estate sector remains under pressure in the post-pandemic economy.

    More evidence hybrid work policies are affecting real estate: Capella University significantly downsized its footprint at the Sixth Street tower that bears its name, giving up 167,000 square feet of leased space. Capella when its new lease takes effect will occupy only 111,714 square feet in the building, according to the first quarter office market report from Chicago-based JLL, a commercial real estate services firm.

    “Capella University moved to hybrid work model expectations in 2023 following the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Lucy Wilson-Garza, spokeswoman for Capella owner Strategic Education Inc. “We routinely assess our physical, brick-and-mortar office space to accommodate the dynamic needs of our employee base. Early this year, Capella University reevaluated our lease at the Capella Tower and used this opportunity to consolidate space.”

    Dallas-based CBRE Group Inc., which handles leasing for Capella Tower, declined comment. Officials for San Francisco-based Shorenstein Properties, which owns the tower, could not be reached for comment.

    The overall office vacancy rate for downtown Minneapolis at the end of the first quarter was 31.3%, up a percentage point from the same quarter a year ago, according to Chicago-based Cushman & Wakefield, a commercial real estate services firm. In the first quarter of 2019, the rate was 19.6%.

    More than 8.9 million square feet of office space in downtown Minneapolis is now available for lease, the firm said.

    The Miami-based Starwood Capital Group acquired Wells Fargo Center for $315 million in 2019. Starwood representatives could not be reached for comment. CBRE is handling the listing.

    The news regarding Wells Fargo and Capella are par for the course, real estate experts said.

    Two dominant themes of today’s office market are that tenants are seeking less space and buildings are being sold at steep discounts compared to previous sales.

    “Values have dropped significantly and it’s time for a reset,” said Mike Salmen, managing principal for the Minneapolis office of Houston-based Transwestern.

    The Cushman & Wakefield report took note of a smaller deal earlier this year in the Warehouse District: “the Kickernick Building in the Minneapolis CBD was sold at auction for $3.8 million, or approximately 20% of its 2017 sale price of $19.15 million.”

    Adam Duininck, CEO of the Minneapolis Downtown Council, said the downtown recovery remains mixed.

    “I think there’s a little bit of good news and a little bit of challenging news,” said Adam Duininck, CEO of the Minneapolis Downtown Council.

    Duininck pointed to U.S. Bancorp signing a 10-year renewal for its downtown headquarters last fall as a good sign. Downtown Council statistics show hotel occupancy, transit ridership and returning office workers are all increasing.

    “We know there’s more activity that’s happening month by month,” Duininck said.

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    Burl Gilyard

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  • The Classical Music Project Returns to Westminster on June 2nd – Minneapolis Riverfront News – Minneapolis Riverfront Neighborhoods.

    The Classical Music Project Returns to Westminster on June 2nd – Minneapolis Riverfront News – Minneapolis Riverfront Neighborhoods.

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    June 2, 3pm Westminster Presbyterian Church

    Sponsored by The Dakota

    The Classical Music Project, launched in 2023, seeks to offer audiences intimate and thought-provoking musical experiences that highlight the beauty and complexity of classical music of the 17th-19th centuries. As a member of the Incubator Program at Springboard for the Arts, the project is committed to exploring new and creative approaches to presenting older music in a modern context.

    .

    The first concert of the 2024 season promises to be a captivating exploration of love, revenge, and the beauty of Italy through the music of three influential composers. Get your tickets now and immerse yourself in an afternoon of musical mastery and storytelling.

    .

    The program includes:

    • Sinfonia Avanti II Barcheggio – Alessandro Stradella (Marissa Benedict, Trumpet Solo)
    • Suite from the Ballet Pulcinella – Igor Stravinsky
    • Symphony No. 4 in A, Op. 90 (Italian) – Felix Mendelssohn

    Marissa Benedict will be featured as a solo performer. Her impressive resume includes being the first woman trumpet player to record on prestigious scoring stages and being featured on numerous blockbuster film and television soundtracks.

    .

    Jere Lantz, Conductor, has been recognized with many awards for his contributions to the world of classical music, and his dedication to the arts has left a lasting impact on the communities he has served. His passion for sharing the joy of music with audiences of all ages and backgrounds has made him a beloved figure in the world of classical music. 

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    Kim Eslinger

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  • Plan for Habitat for Humanity homes on Minnetonka church property appears likely to be denied

    Plan for Habitat for Humanity homes on Minnetonka church property appears likely to be denied

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    Minnetonka hosts debate over affordable housing on Mills Church property


    Minnetonka hosts debate over affordable housing on Mills Church property

    00:48

    MINNETONKA, Minn. — Mills Church and Habitat for Humanity are pushing for more affordable housing in Minnetonka, but the City Council doesn’t appear to be on board.

    The units would be built on the church’s property in the Minnetonka Mills neighborhood. The historic church, built in the late 1800s, sits on prime real estate near the intersection of Minnetonka Boulevard and Plymouth Road.

    Officials from the church and the nonprofit were present during the Minnetonka Planning Commission’s Thursday night meeting to discuss the proposed construction.

    Their original plan, first unveiled in 2022, called for more than a dozen townhomes. They recently submitted an updated plan that would instead include five duplexes on more than 8 acres of church land.

    MORE NEWS: Hopkins parents charged after 9-year-old daughter dies of asthma attack

    raw-minnetonka-mills-afforable-housing-campos-041824.jpg

    WCCO


    But a city staff report already infers the City Council, which has suggested keeping residential buildings in residential areas, will shut the plan down.

    Residents opposed to the plan say they’re against rezoning, not Habitat for Humanity.

    “We’re actually for affordable housing, just in the right place,” said resident Carrie Michels. “In the Minnetonka Mills area, that is not the right place.”

    Chris Coleman is president and CEO of Twin Cities Habitat for Humanity.

    “We need to be able to accelerate these processes. You can’t spend five years trying to build 10 units of housing,” Coleman said. “If you do, you’ll never get out of the housing crisis that we have in Minnesota.”

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    Stephen Swanson

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