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Honor procession transports slain officers to MN for autopsies

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An honor procession left Barron for a Twin Cities medical examiner’s office with the bodies of Cameron officer Hunter Scheel and Chetek officer Emily Breidenbach.

BARRON, Wis. — Authorities have officially identified two western Wisconsin police officers shot while conducting a traffic stop, and the motorist accused of ending their lives. 

The Wisconsin Department of Justice (DOJ) says 32-year-old Chetek police officer Emily Breidenbach and 23-year-old Cameron police officer Hunter Scheel pulled a vehicle over in the village of Cameron based on an arrest warrant and a requested welfare check on the driver. Law enforcement had been contacted about concerning behavior exhibited by the man behind the wheel, identified by authorities as 50-year-old Glenn Douglas Perry.

DOJ says during the stop gunfire was exchanged, and both Breidenbach and Scheel were shot and declared deceased on the scene. Perry was taken to a local hospital where he died. 

While state authorities did not say what the warrant was about, law enforcement sources tell KARE 11’s Lou Raguse that a judge issued an order Mar. 30 giving officers the authority to arrest Perry on sight due to his failure to pay child support following a 2021 divorce. 

Breidenbach was a four-year veteran of the Chetek PD, where she moved after starting her career in Stoughton. Scheel graduated from law enforcement academy in December of 2022 and signed on with Cameron PD. 

An honor procession left the western Wisconsin community of Barron early Monday to deliver the bodies of Breidenbach and Scheel for autopsies that will be performed in the Twin Cities. The procession is expected to return to Barron between 5:30 and 5:45 p.m. 

The officers had already been named on social media through heartfelt tributes from family members and friends. Among them was the partner of Hunter Scheel. 

“Hunter Timothy Scheel meant so much to so many people and left anyone he encountered with a laugh and a smile. Hunter was a living blessing who cared so deeply for those he loved,” wrote Camryn Gosdeck on her Facebook page. “Not only was he an officer for the Cameron Police Department, he also served for the Army National Guard and volunteered himself to serve in Afghanistan.”

“We had so much planned for our future and looked forward to growing old with one another,” she continued. “Because of this, I am absolutely heartbroken and never knew I could feel such an immense pain as having my other half ripped from me. My heart hurts for him, for his family and anyone who had the pleasure of knowing him.”  

It is with a heavy heart to share that my love, my soulmate, and my best friend made the ultimate sacrifice doing…

Posted by Camryn Gosdeck on Sunday, April 9, 2023

KARE 11’s Raguse earlier spoke with a good friend and neighbor of Officer Breidenback who confirmed her passing. The Chetek officer was also named in posts by multiple people, including her step-sister and a neighboring fire department. 

“Emily Ann I’ve known you since you were ten when my pops (Tim) married your mom. You have always been a shining beckon of light,” wrote Karen Yonke. “You have always lived life with such adventure and treated everyone around you with dignity and respect. From the silly vibrant 10-year-old to the girl who made a stand in high school to shave her head to the beautiful woman you were. You will be remembered and thought of daily. Every time I hear a bike pass my house I will remember Mama Sue and all who know Emily. I am truly sorry for all of our loss.”

The Pardeeville Fire Department noted that Emily followed her father, former police chief Robert Breidenbach, into the field of law enforcement.  

A post from the Milwaukee Fire Honor Guard included pictures of Scheel and Breidenback and their official badge numbers, imploring that the two “never be forgotten. 

We pray for the families and departments of these two LODD, may they never be forgotten. Officer Emily Breidenbach and Officer Hunter Scheel.
Village of Cameron Police Department
Chetek Police Department

Posted by Milwaukee Fire Honor Guard, INC. on Monday, April 10, 2023

KARE 11 has multiple crews covering this story and will have the latest developments online and on our broadcasts at 4, 5, 6 and 10 p.m.

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Uptown’s HUGE Improv Theater closing in October

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The board said performances and classes will cease with the theater’s closure at the end of October.

MINNEAPOLIS — The Minneapolis theater community was dealt a huge blow Friday after it was announced a popular improv performance space will close next month.

Managing director of Uptown’s HUGE Improv Theater, Sean Dillon, confirmed the news to KARE 11 Friday afternoon. Dillon said performances and classes will cease with the theater’s closure at the end of October. A Facebook post published by the theater chalked up the reasons for the decision as “complex, but they ultimately boil down to money.”

“The Board has concluded that, after a series of expected and unexpected challenges, cash flow just cannot sustain the work HUGE was set out to accomplish,” the post reads.

To the HUGE community:
With great sadness, the Board of HUGE Improv Theater has made the difficult decision to close …

Posted by HUGE Theater on Friday, September 6, 2024

But while the theater maintains the closure comes amid financial troubles, some members of the community believe the closure is related to the resignation of the theater’s co-founder Butch Roy and artistic director Becky Hauser last month. The resignations came after it was alleged the theater whitewashed casting for an upcoming show. The theater’s co-executive and inclusion director, John Gebretatose, went on to write an open letter, questioning the theater’s commitment to diversity among its performers.

Following the resignations, the board released a statement on its website, saying it was “in the process of developing a plan to ensure we reflect our ideal that improv is for everyone.”

The HUGE Improv Theater Board also denied the rumors in its social media post Friday. 

“We want to be emphatically clear: the open letter raising concerns about diversity on HUGE’s stage is not the reason for this closure,” the post said. “HUGE was already in a precarious financial situation, and there simply isn’t a viable way forward. 

“Our struggle to find sufficient stable funding in no way diminishes the amazing work that HUGE has produced and supported over the years, and more importantly the diverse and enthusiastic community it has fostered. 

“We know work still lies ahead to ensure that improv in the Twin Cities is truly a space for everyone, and we look to our community to continue these vital and challenging conversations.”

Co-founder Jill Bernard, who began improv in 1993, is grateful to have helped take the Minneapolis improv scene to new heights.

“When I started improv in 1993, there were very few women, there were very BIPOC performers, and we’ve sort of changed everything that’s possible for people to really hear and use their own voices on stage,” Bernard said. “And I feel like HUGE was a big part of that.”

The theater said it plans to run its shows through October as planned, as well as its fall term classes. The board encouraged the community to support performers and “participate in the life of the theater to the fullest extent you can.”

“There will be more to share as we move forward, but for now: thank you all for everything you have given to this place, and for always being the beating heart of what makes HUGE HUGE.”





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Shorewood woman crossing street dies when struck by vehicle

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A Shorewood woman died Friday after being hit by a truck while crossing the street.

SHOREWOOD, Minn — A woman died on Friday after being hit by a truck while crossing a highway in Shorewood.

It happened at about 1 p.m., according to Minnesota State Patrol, on Highway 7.

Officials said the 65-year-old woman from Shorewood was walking across the highway at Christmas Lake Road when she was struck by a Ford F150 that was turning left onto Highway 7. 

The name of the victim has not yet been made public. 



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Grand Meadow’s Grand Mess: MN town fights to remove abandoned wind turbine blades

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After four years, mounting safety concerns, and a Public Utilities Commission hearing, 100+ wind turbine blades stuck Grand Meadow could finally be on the move.

GRAND MEADOW, Minn. — Wind turbines are a common sight across southern Minnesota, but a massive pile of more than 100+ discarded wind turbine blades isn’t something you see every day.

Unless you live in Grand Meadow.

“The whole town is upset about it,” said Patti Harvey who lives near the lot where the blades have been sitting since 2020.  “It’s a real mess.”

“This is a nuisance,” said Mower County Commissioner, Polly Glynn, who also lives in the town, which is about 20 miles south of Rochester.

“I call it a turbine graveyard,” said Grand Meadow City Administrator, James Christian, who has been looking for a way to remove the turbines ever since it was clear that they had overstayed their welcome. The owners thought they’d be here for about three months. This was supposed to be just a temporary lay-down yard.”

NextEra Energy decommissioned the blades from its nearby windfarm in 2020, and paid a start-up called RiverCap to remove them.

“Initially, (RiverCap) was going to recycle them, and crush them down into an aggregate that would then go into concrete,” Christian said. “And then this spinoff company from RiverCap, called Canvus, they were going to turn them into furniture. Outdoor furniture.”

“Everything sounded wonderful, but it just didn’t get done,” said Glynn, who said she spoke to and emailed with the recycling company several times. “But every deadline has come and gone.” 

Eventually, Glynn said both companies went out of business and the blades became a growing health and safety issue.

“It’s nasty, just nasty stuff,” Havey said. “It’s dirty and the kids want to play on it and there’s all kinds of critters that live in those things.”

“We’ve had a lot of problems with animals out here,” Christian said. “Raccoons, foxes, and other animals that shouldn’t be in town.”

After yet another deadline came and went in July, Christian stopped playing nice.

“I knocked on every door and called every number I could find until I finally got to the Utilities Commission,” he said.

After looking into the site permit for the wind farm, Christian decided to file a complaint against NextEra Energy.

“In the initial permit application, they said that they were going to have these things taken care of, recycled or put in a proper facility,” he said. 

In the PUC hearing about that complaint on Thursday, NextEra Energy representatives said they do not have ownership of the blades, but with the owners out of business and unresponsive the commission ordered NextEra to take action.

“When we do these permits, we expect you to act in good faith and follow your commitments and you have the permit obligation to put them at an appropriate facility,” said commissioner John Tuma. “I find it not appropriate. I find that sticking it in Grand Meadow is not a final resting place.”

NextEra Energy then agreed to get to work.

“Removal must start by Oct. 5 and must be completed by Dec. 15 of this year,” Christian said. “It felt like I was finally being listened to.”

“James (Christian) has really stepped up and tried to get this out,” Glynn said. “I feel pretty good that we’ve got some clout behind it now. Hopefully, it will get done.”

Christian: “I’ll believe it when I see it, but I do have a little more faith than I had yesterday morning.”

Erdahl: “Are they going to throw you a parade if this actually happens?” 

Christian: “There was mention yesterday of a parade once the final truck leaves town. Put some banners and ribbons on it.” 



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