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Lawsuit alleges illegal social media suveillance by MPD
The lawsuit, filed by the U of M’s Racial Justice Law Clinic, says MPD officers used covert accounts to spy on NAACP members without investigative purpose.
MINNEAPOLIS — Editor’s note: The video above first aired on April 29, 2022.
The Minneapolis Police Department (MPD) is once again in the legal crosshairs, this time the subject of a federal lawsuit filed by the NAACP over alleged social media surveillance.
Filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court, the lawsuit accuses MPD officers of using covert social media accounts to follow the activities of NAACP officials “without any investigative purpose.” The plaintiffs say up to 20 officers posed as Black community members to interact with, criticize and harass the Minneapolis NAACP and “push racist stereotypes about Black people.”
The complaint is based on an investigative report on misconduct within MPD compiled by the Minnesota Department of Human Rights and released in April of 2022. NAACP leaders say the report is just the latest in a series of investigations that confirm the racist culture and practices of the embattled department.
“While the Minneapolis Police Department’s surveillance of our membership is not surprising, it is disappointing. We assumed that our work with MPD on public safety and community matters was being done in good faith. Instead, MPD simultaneously tried to bring us harm. To know MPD surveilled our members is deeply unnerving and upsetting,” said Cynthia Wilson, President of the Minneapolis NAACP. “Their actions violated our trust. MPD needs to be held accountable to prevent this from happening to anyone else.
The lawsuit concludes that MPD officers clearly violated guarantees of the First and Fourteenth amendments through alleged racially discriminatory policing, selective investigation, harassment, and unlawful surveillance.
The NAACP is asking for compensatory and punitive damages from the officers and the city of Minneapolis to be determined at jury trial, plus coverage of all legal costs.
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Search ongoing for missing woman in Aitkin County
Authorities said they’re concerned for Yarmakov’s wellbeing because she lives with autism and Type 1 Diabetes.
MCGREGOR, Minn. — Search and rescue efforts are ongoing for a woman who went missing in rural Aitkin County last week as multiple local and state agencies and volunteers continue to comb through the area north of McGregor.
In an update posted to its Facebook page Tuesday morning, the Aitkin County Sheriff’s Office said Tonya Yarmakov, 23, still hadn’t been located since her family reported her missing from Savanna State Park on Sept. 4. Authorities said they’re concerned for Yarmakov’s wellbeing because she lives with autism and Type 1 Diabetes.
According to the sheriff’s original press release, Yarmakov was in the park outside McGregor with her family the morning she went missing. The release said family members allegedly told authorities they left Yarmakov alone on a dock as they went fishing, and around noon, saw her get up and run away.
The statement said the family launched their own search before reporting her missing around 1:30 p.m.
Yarmakov is 5 feet tall and has dark brown hair. The sheriff said she was last seen wearing a rainbow tie-dyed t-shirt, gym shorts, black shoes and black headphones.
According to police, crews have logged hundreds of hours searching for Yarmakov thus far, but have not turned up any leads.
If you have information about Yarmakov’s current whereabouts, the Aitkin County Sheriff’s Office urges you to contact them at 218-927-7435 or call 911.
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2 hospitalized after car runs through wall of Duluth school
While the school building was impacted, police say no students or staffers were hurt in the incident.
DULUTH, Minn. — Students and staffers at a Duluth elementary school encountered a bit of unexpected – and unwanted – excitement Friday morning when a vehicle smashed through a wall of their gym.
Northern News Now/KBJR reports that the incident unfolded at Myers-Wilkins Elementary on N. 8th Ave. E. just before 8:30 a.m. Duluth police told the station that two people were inside the vehicle when it ran a stop sign, went through the intersection and down an embankment, then careened through the gym wall.
No one inside the school was hurt, but the two people in the car were taken to the hospital for treatment.
The Duluth Public School District tells Northern News Now the gymnasium will be closed for an undetermined time while engineers examine its structural integrity.
Meanwhile the school is on a secure protocol, meaning access to the building is limited while students go about their day.
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Otter attacks child, drags them underwater at Bremerton Marina
The child was taken to a nearby hospital to be treated for scratches and bite wounds to the head, face and legs.
BREMERTON, Wash. — A child and their mother were attacked by a river otter at the Bremerton Marina Thursday morning.
According to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW), a woman and her young child were walking on a dock around 9:30 a.m. when the river otter pulled the child into the water. The woman said the child was underwater for a few moments before resurfacing.
WDFW officials say the otter kept attacking the woman while she pulled the child out of the water.
The child was treated at a hospital in Silverdale for scratches and bite wounds to the head, face and legs. The woman was bit on the arm.
“We are grateful the victim only sustained minor injuries due to the mother’s quick actions and child’s resiliency,” said WDFW Sergeant Ken Balazs said in a prepared statement. “We would also like to thank the Port of Bremerton for their quick coordination and communication to their marina tenants.”
According to WDFW, the otters in the marina will be “trapped and lethally removed” by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services, then tested for rabies.
River otter attacks are rare, and WDFW officials advise against instigating any close encounters. There have been six documented human-river otter incidents in Washington state in the last decade.
“When we do see this on the rare occasion that it does occur, it’s for territoriality or protecting its pups. If it’s a female, protecting its pups,” said Matt Blankenship with the WDFW.
And while many think of them as cute, curious creatures. They can cause serious injuries.
Jen Royce, who lives in Bozeman, Montana, was attacked by a river otter last summer. The damage was extensive.
“I had really large bite wounds on each cheek. A really big gash on this left side of my eye here.. luckily it didn’t get my eye.. it bit through my nose,” Royce said.
She wants to urge others to be cautious around the animal.
“My main goal is to spread awareness. I don’t want people to go out and kill otters. That’s not what this is about. It’s about trying to be more prepared in nature,” Royce said. “Not to let your guard down and hopefully, if someone learns something from my story. I feel like that’s why I’m still here.”
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