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State trooper escorts kindergartener whose life he helped save
Lt. Paul Stricker helped save the life of then-6-week-old Elise Lonsbury along a busy freeway.
WAYZATA, Minn. —
Elise Lonsbury had everything set for her first day of kindergarten.
But Elise’s first-day-of-school list was likely the only one that included a state trooper.
“Five years ago, I would have never guessed that we’d be doing this,” Lt. Paul Stricker of the Minnesota State Patrol said.
As Elise entered Deephaven Elementary for her first day of classes, Stricker walked side-by-side with the 5-year-old on her way to the kindergarten classroom.
It’s a moment that might never have happened if Stricker and a nurse hadn’t stopped their cars on a busy freeway to save Elise’s life.
“It’s one of those things that I’ll never forget about,” the veteran trooper said.
Elise was 6 weeks old at the time.
She’d woken up listless.
Her mother, Kristin Lonsbury, was driving her daughter to the hospital when she was startled by choking sounds coming from Elise’s car seat.
Lonsbury quickly steered the car to the side of busy Interstate 394, just west of downtown Minneapolis. She pulled her daughter out of the car seat.
“We were on the side of the road in the weeds. She was unconscious; I could not get her to wake up,” Kristin Lonsbury said. “I had thought, in that moment, my child was dying.”
Lonsbury needed an angel.
Virginia Marsh, a nurse on her way to work, and Stricker, who just happened to be driving by, worked together to keep Elise alive until an ambulance arrived.
“Something touched all of us that day that made our paths cross for the right reasons and it was a blessing,” Stricker said.
Elise spent the next five days in the hospital. Turns out her breathing problems initiated with a virus, from which she made a full recovery.
Kristin Lonsbury retrieves a letter, now in a frame, Elise received from Stricker one year after the rescue.
“While you are too young to understand,” the trooper wrote to Elise, “I will always be here for you as your guardian.”
To emphasize the point, Stricker had made — and put on a gold chain — a miniature replica of his badge.
“It’s her most prized possession,” Kristin Lonsbury said.
Like the jumpsuit and sparkly shoes, the badge also landed on Elise’s school list.
“Special badge,” she said.
Elise’s mom first floated in jest the notion of Stricker escorting Elise to her first day of kindergarten.
But when Stricker offered to make himself available, jest became reality.
Kristin Lonsbury invited Marsh, too, who was unable to get away from her nursing job.
So, on the first day of kindergarten, Elise greeted Stricker in the school parking lot with a hug.
Then, the uniformed officer took Elise’s hand and walked her into the school.
“To have Paul here is really special for her,” Elise’s mother said. “I hope she never forgets the moment.”
At the classroom, Elise high-fived her mom before hugging her dad and big sister.
Then, one final hug for Stricker.
“Have a fun time at school, OK,” Stricker told Elise.
How different things might have been if not for a quick-thinking nurse and state trooper.
“To see her as happy as she is today is pretty special,” Stricker said.
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‘Back to the Future the Musical’ coming to Orpheum
Synchronize your watches! The award-winning best new musical sets its destination to the Orpheum.
MINNEAPOLIS — You don’t need to build a flux capacitator to travel back in time and relive an ’80s phenomenon.
“Back to the Future the Musical,” which won the 2022 Olivier Award for Best New Musical, is coming to the historic Orpheum Theatre in downtown Minneapolis at the beginning of fall.
The London’s West End and Broadway show is based on the 1985 blockbuster film that spawned two sequels: “Back to the Future Part II” in 1989 and “Back to the Future Part III” in 1990. All three films combined grossed nearly a billion dollars.
The award-winning musical stars Caden Brauch as Marty McFly, Don Stephenson as Doc Brown and Ethan Rogers as Biff Tannen.
“Back to the Future the Musical” officially premiered at the Manchester Opera House on March 11, 2020. It then had a huge run at London’s West End beginning in 2021 and hit Broadway in August of 2023.
The musical is directed by Tony Award-winner John Rando with original music by multi-Grammy-winners Alan Silvestri (“Avengers: Endgame”) and Glen Ballard (Michael Jackson’s “Man in the Mirror”), alongside songs from the movie including “The Power of Love,” “Johnny B. Goode” and “Back in Time.”
“Back to the Future the Musical” will play at the Orpheum from Tuesday, Sept. 10 to Sunday, Sept. 22.
Tickets, which start at $50, will go on sale at HennepinTheatreTrust.org on Friday, June 14, 2024, at 10 a.m.
The production contains flashing lights, strobe effects, pyrotechnics and is recommended for ages 6 and up.
Its run time is 2 hours and 35 minutes and includes one intermission.
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Woman last seen 1 year ago sought by Anoka County Sheriff
Marina Dougall, 36, was last seen in Minneapolis in September of last year but wasn’t reported missing until May 2024.
ANOKA COUNTY, Minn. — The Anoka County Sheriff’s Office is asking the public to help find a missing Anoka County woman who they believe is without critical medication.
Marina Dougall, 36, was last seen in Minneapolis in September of last year but wasn’t reported missing until May 2024. Police said her family hasn’t heard from her since she was last seen.
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension released a statement Wednesday, saying Dougall was known to frequent the Franklin Avenue North area of Minneapolis as well as places throughout Anoka County and across the Twin Cities metro. Investigators said she may have been in the area of Burnett County, Wisconsin last September, before being dropped off at the Norwoood Inn in Roseville.
The BCA said Dougall has a medical condition that requires medication, and that she also has a history of mental health and substance abuse issues.
Dougall is described as 5’9 and 140 pounds, with brown hair and green eyes. She also has a chipped front tooth, flower tattoos on her right hand and left shoulder, a snowflake tattoo on her right abdomen and a large tattoo on her back.
The BCA added Dougall was born in Russia and speaks with a slight accent.
If you’ve seen Dougall or know any information about her whereabouts, you’re urged to call 911 or contact the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office at 763-324-5209.
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Shooter sentenced to 30 years in murder of transgender woman
A judge handed 25-year-old Damarean Bible a 367-month sentence – 30 and 1/2 years – for killing 37-year-old Savannah Williams in November of 2023.
MINNEAPOLIS — A Minneapolis man will serve more than 20 years in prison after being convicted of second-degree intentional murder in the death of a transgender woman in November of 2023.
A Hennepin County district judge sentenced Damarean Kaylon Bible to 367 months – or 30 and 1/2 years – for fatally shooting Savannah Ryan Williams, a woman who was well-known in the Twin Cities trans community. He will serve two-thirds of that sentence behind bars.
“This senseless act of violence against a Native and Cuban transgender woman has left a family without a daughter, a partner without their person, and a community without the vibrant light that Savannah uniquely brought to every room she was in,” said Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty following the sentencing. “Savannah deserved safety.”
Moriarty said investigators in her office conducted a thorough review to determine whether the killing was motivated by bias, but concluded they could not prove bias beyond a reasonable doubt. The county attorney did say Williams’ murder is part of a pattern of escalating attacks against trans women, particularly those who are of color. She said since 2013, 286 trans women have been killed, with 85% of those victims being Bipoc women.
Two state legislators who are members of the Queer Caucus vowed to continue work at the State Capitol to protect Minnesota’s transgender community and increase penalties against those who harm them.
“Savannah Ryan Williams was a beloved member of the trans and Two Spirit community, and she should be alive today,” said Minnesota Rep. Leigh Finke (DFL-66A). “The data is clear that trans people, especially trans people of color, suffer violence at rates far greater than our cisgender neighbors. The Queer Caucus will continue do everything in our power at the Capitol to solve this crisis, and I thank the County Attorney’s Office for sharing this commitment.”
Minneapolis police were dispatched to the 3000 block of 4th Ave. S. around 9 a.m. Nov. 29, 2023 on reports of someone not breathing. Witnesses told officers they heard a gunshot just before 6 a.m.
Investigators used surveillance video to track the shooting suspect to an apartment building where they arrested Bible.
A criminal complaint says Bible admitted to shooting Williams in the head. He told police she approached him for a sexual encounter but he began to feel “suspicious.” After the act, he shot and killed her, according to court documents. Bible reportedly confessed after police found surveillance video of him at the scene near the Lake Street light rail station.
The complaint said while in jail, Bible told his dad he “just murdered someone.” It reads that he felt sorry for killing the victim and knew he wasn’t God, but he “had to do it.”
He was convicted of second-degree intentional murder on Aug. 27, 2024.
Following her death, friends remembered Williams as a big personality who was “full of life.”
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