ReportWire

Tag: Maple Grove News

  • Warren Limmer, longest serving GOP state senator, to retire after 38 years at Minnesota Capitol

    [ad_1]


    State Sen. Warren Limmer, the longest serving Republican-endorsed state senator in Minnesota history, says says he will retire at the end of the year.

    Limmer was first elected to the Minnesota House in 1988, and won a special election to represent the Maple Grove area in the state Senate in 1995.

    “I have been greatly honored that the public has trusted me to be their voice in Minnesota government since 1988,” Limmer said in his Monday announcement.

    He currently serves as a ranking minority member on the Judiciary and Public Safety Committee, and also works with the Elections and Rules and Administrations committees. During his tenure, he has also held Senate leadership positions, including assistant majority leader and president pro tempore. 

    He is also a member of the advisory committee on security at the Minnesota Capitol.

    Limmer said that he does not “plan on going silently into retirement.”

    “I have too much experience to stay quiet. I plan to stay involved in Minnesota’s political process,” he said.

    Nineteen other Minnesota legislators are planning to retire after this year’s session. 

    The 2026 legislative session begins on Feb. 17.

    [ad_2]

    Aki Nace

    Source link

  • Police investigating shooting at Benihana in Maple Grove

    [ad_1]


    Police in Maple Grove, Minnesota, are investigating a shooting that they say happened at the Japanese restaurant Benihana on Friday. 

    Officials said on Friday evening that “there is no ongoing or immediate threat to the public,” though details surrounding the incident at the restaurant on Fountains Way haven’t been disclosed.

    Police in Maple Grove, Minnesota, investigate a shooting they say happened at the Japanese restaurant Benihana on Nov. 14, 2025.

    WCCO


    WCCO has a crew at the scene.

    This is a developing story. Stay with WCCO.com for more.

    [ad_2]

    Nick Lentz

    Source link

  • Boston Scientific opens 400,000-square-foot facility in Maple Grove

    [ad_1]

    Boston Scientific’s presence in Minnesota continues to grow, as the biotechnology company opened a new facility in Maple Grove Monday morning.

    The 400,000-square-foot Arbor Lakes facility will serve as an office building and a lab for one of the country’s leading medical device technology companies. 

    WCCO


    The new facility along Highway 694 “enables growth,” said Boston Scientific executive Brad Sorenson.   

    The company makes stents, pacemakers, heart monitors and other equipment doctors and surgeons use for patient care.

    Company executives say no manufacturing will occur at the Arbor Lakes facility, but they are still manufacturing at their other Maple Grove site at Weaver Lake, as well as at their Arden Hills facility. 

    This story will be updated.

    [ad_2]

    Jonah Kaplan

    Source link

  • State investigating after 2 workers die at different Twin Cities construction sites within 48 hours

    [ad_1]

    Friends and family of two construction workers are grieving after two different construction sites in the Twin Cities saw fatalities within 48 hours.

    The first happened on Wednesday on Interstate 35W in Burnsville. The other was on Thursday off Highway 610 in Maple Grove.

    “It’s been extremely difficult and tough for all workers in Minnesota,” said Joel Smith, the president of the union representing nearly 14,000 construction and general laborers across the area. “The families of the members, Pierre and Adam, that died tragically … we’re thinking of them, supporting them, consulting them.”

    Just before 9 a.m. Wednesday, 29-year-old Pierre Mack, a cement mixer, died after a boom truck hit him off I-35W in Burnsville. Adam Smith, 25, was on the job alongside Highway 610 in Maple Grove on Thursday afternoon when he was fatally struck by a dump truck.

    Mack’s father, Bernara Harris, spoke to WCCO on Thursday.

    “That smile was incredible, bro. I’m talking like … he could light a room. He smiled, and man, it’s over. It’s just over,” said Harris.

    The Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry said the state’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration is investigating both incidents.

    “Minnesota OSHA Compliance will inspect the work area for safety or health hazards, interview the employer and other employees, and review any required training procedures and training records,” the state agency said in a written statement. 

    Smith says that, in our region, many construction workers are fitting a year’s worth of hours in a 7- or 8-month period, adding to the pressure of an already hectic surrounding.

    “We’ve got people going past you, at inches, at 50 to 70 miles an hour. So these are very dangerous jobs to begin with,” said Smith.

    He added that, by putting your foot on the brake, “You’re impacting people’s lives that are no different than anybody else. Take your time, obey the speed limits and the distance and be aware.”

    The union is working to provide mental health resources to those who witnessed the deaths.

    In response to the tragedies, the Minnesota Department of Transportation is asking all staff to observe a “safety stand down” at work on Monday.

    [ad_2]

    Frankie McLister

    Source link

  • Mora man threatens church music director and others, blaming them for killing

    [ad_1]

    A man from Mora, Minnesota, has been charged with four counts of threats of violence after allegedly sending emails that threatened a Maple Grove church music director and others. 

    According to a criminal complaint filed on Friday for the 64-year-old, one email was sent directly to the music director, and multiple others were sent to another person. That person then forwarded them to the director, since they are friends. All of the messages were sent between Sept. 13 and 16.

    The music director told police he didn’t know the suspect but thought that the suspect may have seen him perform at a church concert, according to the charges. 

    In a message sent directly to the music director on Sept. 15, the man wrote in part that “you think that ice is evil” and that “I think that you and your cohorts have killed my friend Charlie,” a reference to conservative activist Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated earlier this month in Utah. The email went on to say the suspect holds the victim and his people responsible, according to the charging document.

    “It’s fair game to let the hunted know that they are hunted. You are now advised,” the message continued.

    A message dated Sept. 13 to the witness said, according to the charges, in part that “John Lennon got his life taken away from him. Keep your shifty views to yourself. … Play the songs. The music speaks volumes.”

    In another message dated Sept. 15, the document says the suspect wrote, “We are expecting an apology from the church and you and specifically [victim]. You better find a f****** way. I’m going to break your f****** fingers. You will never play the f****** kyes (sic) again.”  

    Days later, two messages were sent, according to the complaint. The first said, “Go ahead and call your feds and cops. I will get out and then I will find you.” The second said, “All your liberal left leaning people are now targets. You people killed my friend with your rhetoric.” 

    The charges, which were filed on Friday in Hennepin County, carry a maximum 20-year sentence and a $20,000 fine if convicted. 

    White Bear Lake police announced Friday they had arrested the man after receiving reports of threatening emails being sent to “several” members of a church in their city, including various church leaders. According to police, their investigation found the emails had “repeated threats of violence.” 

    Police say the man was found and arrested at an airport hangar north of the Twin Cities. While searching his vehicle, officers say they found ammunition and electronic devices. He is being held in Ramsey County.   

    Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty sounded off on the charges, saying in part the community “is still reeling from the recent assassination of Rep. Melissa Hortman and Mark Hortman, and attempted assassinations of Sen. John Hoffman, Yvette Hoffman and Rep. Kristin Bahner. We will not tolerate threats of politically motivated violence and will do everything in our power to hold those who make these threats accountable.” 

    The charges come amid a wave of political violence, including two apparent attempts on President Trump’s life — one just over a year ago at a Florida golf course, and another at a political rally in Pennsylvania in July of 2024. Meanwhile, the home of Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro was intentionally set on fire while he and his family were home, according to court documents. 

    On Thursday, members of the U.S. House of Representatives voted on and passed a resolution honoring the life of Kirk. Congresswoman Angie Craig (D-MN) said on Friday regarding her vote in favor of the resolution that “political violence is a grave threat to our democracy.” 

    [ad_2]

    Krystal Frasier

    Source link

  • Missing Maple Grove man found dead, police say

    [ad_1]




































    8 charged with defrauding Minnesota housing program, fallout from cancellation of Jimmy Kimmel and m



    8 charged with defrauding Minnesota housing program, fallout from cancellation of Jimmy Kimmel and more headlines

    06:47

    A missing Maple Grove, Minnesota, man has been found dead, according to authorities.

    The Maple Grove Police Department said the 35-year-old man was last seen on Aug. 18. On Friday, the department canceled the missing person alert for him after the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office positively identified his body.

    Police did not say where or when he was found dead.

    Authorities and his family had been concerned for his safety.

    [ad_2] Krystal Frasier
    Source link

  • Annunciation shooting may renew calls for more resource officers in Minnesota schools

    [ad_1]

    Two years after a controversial discrepancy over the use-of-force law in Minnesota led to police departments pulling resource officers from schools, there could be a renewed effort to increase police presence in places of learning.

    Since lawmakers clarified the bill and departments sent resource officers back to schools after a multi-month hiatus, Minnesota has created a unified, statewide training for all SROs.

    Yet Rudy Perez, interim chief of Golden Valley police and senior advisor to the National Association of School Resource Officers, says there could be an even bigger push to address school safety this legislative session.

    “I’m in a place where I’ve seen the pendulum shift,” said Perez on Friday. “The best way to maintain school safety is have someone who’s properly trained, properly selected, properly equipped. Law enforcement officers.”

    At Osseo High School, Maple Grove resource officers Tony Mollen and Missy Parker spent the first seven months of the 2023 school year outside the building. The two said they’d end up going to school sporting events to connect with students.

    In light of the attack at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis, Mollen and Parker say they’re focused on what it would mean to protect the school’s 2400 students.

    “We both have kids. We can’t not take that stuff personal,” Mollen said. “It’s a reminder that’s always there in the back of our minds, that we know bad things can happen. It hits a lot closer when it’s this close to our community.”

    “It’s something that’s never going to leave your mind, you’re always going to think about, ‘We’re ready, we’re prepared. We know what we’d need to do,'” Parker said. “I think there’s always a perception that the police are in there to do police things. We’re going to arrest kids, take them to jail. That’s not why we’re here.”

    Perez says the focus on adding SROs to schools statewide could extend to both public and private institutions.

    “We have to have deep conversations with legislators, and legislators have to have the ability to say, ‘We are willing to provide somebody to address these issues when they arise,'” he said. 

    [ad_2]

    Adam Duxter

    Source link

  • Body found in pond within Maple Grove’s gravel mining area, police say

    [ad_1]




































    Digital headlines for Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025



    Digital headlines for Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025

    00:46

    Police in Maple Grove, Minnesota, are investigating after the discovery of a body early Friday morning in a pond near a popular park and shopping district.

    Officers were called to the scene at about 6:35 a.m. after a worker spotted the body near 85th Avenue North and Valley Forge Lane North, according to Commander Jonathan Wetternach. The pond is in the northeast corner of the city’s massive gravel mining area that lies east of Central Park and The Shoppes at Arbor Lakes.

    The Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office Water Patrol was called in to help recover the deceased, whose identity and official cause of death will be released at a later time by the county’s medical examiner.

    Wetternach said the discovery “may be connected with a recently reported missing person,” and their family has been notified.

    “There is no known risk to the community,” Wetternach said. “The loss of life is difficult and tragic for any family or community.”

    Maple Grove is about 15 miles northwest of Minneapolis.

    [ad_2]

    WCCO Staff

    Source link

  • Neighbors say hawk is menacing Maple Grove neighborhood

    Neighbors say hawk is menacing Maple Grove neighborhood

    [ad_1]

    MAPLE GROVE, Minn. — A Maple Grove woman was recently attacked by a hawk and she’s not the raptor’s only victim.

    The animal has become a menace in a Maple Grove neighborhood.

    “I didn’t even hear him. They are so, so quiet, which they have to be,” said Abbie Elrod. 

    Elrod’s neighborhood on Polaris Lane has always been peaceful and laid-back. But that was before a broad-winged hawk moved in and the dive-bombing began.

    “And it just felt like a huge pressure right on my head,” said Elrod. “It just kind of felt like a bruise and so I was like, ‘OK mom look, does it look like a bruise?’ She said, ‘No, it’s landing tracks. He got you.'”

    lauritsen-hawk-pic-1img-2993-00-00-22-21-still001.jpg

    Alyssa Wilkins


    The attack happened while she was setting up for a garage sale. The hawk left talon marks in Elrod’s scalp. It also went after her dad and flew off with his hat.

    Raptor experts said hawks prefer larger, older trees for their nests and once their young have hatched, all bets are off.

    Broad-winged hawks are native to South America and call Minnesota home for a few months, while they raise their young. Experts said attacks like these are becoming more common as urban sprawl forces the birds to live closer to humans.

    “It’s definitely the most excitement we’ve had in a long time,” said Jade Forrester.

    Like Elrod and other neighbors, Forrester said she and her son have also been ambushed.

    “I kid you not you guys this is like the most powerful gust of wind. It’s like a fan on you. And you don’t know where it’s coming from,” said Forrester. “You can hear him, it’s as clear as day. That noise, that screech that he does.”

    The hawks will act like that until their young are ready to fly, then the whole family will leave. In the meantime, owl decoys have proven to be an effective dive-bombing deterrent.

    “It does work. It’s a cheap, very easy solution. Keep moving them around, don’t keep them in one spot and they hate it. It’s like magic,” said Elrod.

    Experts at the University of Minnesota’s Raptor Center said the animals will eat rodents and small amphibians and don’t typically kill small pets. While easier said than done, they say the best thing you can do is invest in owl decoys and wait the birds out.

    [ad_2]

    John Lauritsen

    Source link