Star Tribune
Man gets 37½-year sentence for shooting that killed girl jumping on trampoline
The man behind a gang shooting that killed 9-year-old Trinity Ottoson-Smith in north Minneapolis was sentenced to 37½ years on Tuesday, more than two years after the tragic slaying of a child as she was jumping on a trampoline with friends.
D’Pree Shareef Robinson, 20, pleaded guilty in March right as his trial was set to begin, but three weeks ago he tried withdrawing that plea by claiming he was under the influence of pain pills when he waived his right to trial and agreed to a lengthy sentence for murder in connection to the shooting in the 2200 block of Ilion Avenue N. on May 15, 2021.
Hennepin County Judge Julie Allyn wasn’t persuaded by the argument then or on Tuesday when Robinson again tried to say he was not guilty and instead pressured into the plea with his previous attorney. Despite that, he added that he’s sorry, sad and heartbroken about Trinity’s death.
“I did not have nothing to do with this young girl’s death,” Robinson said. “Your honor, can you please give me a chance to take my plea back and give me a chance to fight my case?”
Allyn said she already had ruled the plea was knowingly and intelligently made.
“Now regretting what your sentence could be is not the same thing,” she said. The judge also allowed for a sentence longer than suggested by guidelines because the shooting was made in the presence of children.
“Shooting seven times into a group of children just jumping on a trampoline, just trying to have a normal day at a birthday party, does mean that your conduct was significantly more serious than an average shooting and does justify the additional time,” Allyn said.
Robinson’s sentencing was attended by scores of Trinity’s family and friends all wearing t-shirts memorializing her life and calling for justice. It was standing-room only.
Sobs echoed in the courtroom during victim impact statements from Trinity’s father and stepmother, Korrina Smith, who read letters from siblings and Trinity’s best friend Avayla, whose birthday Trinity was celebrating the day she was shot.
“I don’t have my best friend. Instead she’s above me,” Avayla’s letter read.
Smith said that Trinity was raised by a village and had a promising future.
“Trinity was so much more than the little girl shot on North,” she said.
Trinity’s father, Raishawn Smith, approached the judge while cradling a large picture frame of his favorite image of him holding his newborn daughter Raina on the day she was born with Trinity overlooking her new baby sister.
“I was so nervous about the relationship she would develop with her new sibling because she was such a daddy’s girl. When I saw this picture I knew she was here for it. She loved her siblings, all of them.”
Smith said he stood there in pain, “not for myself, but my family and the community that knew her.”
“I’d give anything to have my baby back,” he said.
Robinson will serve about 25 years in prison, with credit for time already served, as state guidelines require that two-thirds of a criminal sentence be served in prison and the remaining third served on conditional release.
He was charged last February with one count of second-degree murder. A grand jury in July indicted him on three counts of first-degree murder, including one that specifically says the killing was committed for the benefit of a gang.
Prosecutor Joshua Larson said that young men are far too eager to shoot each other despite consequences. And while Trinity was the unintended target, he said the shooting was no accident, as Robinson has described.
“Trinity was taken from us because the defendant intentionally tried to kill someone,” he said.
Robinson committed the drive-by shooting directed at three men on a porch. He disregarded a trampoline full of children in between him and the gang rivals, Larson said.
A bullet struck Trinity in the head. She died in the hospital 12 days later.
In the span of three weeks in 2021, three children were shot in the head on the North Side. Ladavionne Garrett Jr. was struck April 30 while riding in a vehicle, and Aniya Allen, 6, was shot while riding in her mother’s car. She died two days later, on May 19.
Trinity’s killing is the only one that has resulted in an arrest and now a conviction.
A reward of up to $180,000 is being offered for information into the unsolved shootings.
“What a blessing to have the opportunity to bring justice for my daughter,” Smith said. “But this is only one case. There’s so many more kids that need this, so many more families that need this… who have lost a child or had a child hurt wrongfully in the community that they live in, the community that they grow up in— or are supposed to grow up in.”
Ladavionne Garrett Jr.’s grandmother, Sherrie Jennings, attended Robinson’s sentencing in support of the family and to raise awareness of her grandson’s case.
She said he remains unable to walk or talk and has brain surgery schedule for the fall after his 13th birthday in October.
“Justice will be served and we’re coming,” Jennings said. “One down, two to go.”
Star Tribune
Betty Danger’s bar sold to new owner for $3.5 million
Betty Danger’s, the quirky northeast Minneapolis bar known for its Ferris wheel and miniature golf, has been sold for $3.5 million.
The property, located at 2501 Marshall St. NE and 2519 Marshall St. NE, was purchased on Nov. 15, according to the certificate of real estate value filed with the state. The primary buyer of the site is entrepreneur Joe Radaich, according to Taylor VerMeer, a spokeswoman for an undisclosed project planned for the site.
“While I can confirm that Joe Radaich is the primary buyer listed on this project, we are not able to share anything more at this time,” VerMeer said in an email.
Radaich has operated bars in the past, including Sporty’s Pub and Grill, which later became Como Tap. Radaich no longer operates Como Tap, an employee said on Tuesday. Radaich did not return requests for comment. Attempts to reach Leslie Bock, the Betty Danger’s previous owner, were unsuccessful.
The property’s mortgage payments are set at $18,886 per month with a 6.15% interest rate, the state filings show.
Star Tribune
Minneapolis nonprofit that fed low-income kids will dissolve after state investigation
A Minneapolis nonprofit that served food to low-income kids has agreed to dissolve itself after a state investigation found it violated laws regarding its operations and financial transactions.
The move was announced Tuesday by Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, whose office began investigating Gar Gaar Family Services, also known as the Youth Leadership Academy, after it was denied from participating in a federally funded program to provide food to students after school.
The investigation then found additional issues, including:
An attorney who has represented Gar Gaar, Barbara Berens, could not be reached Tuesday afternoon. Neither Ali or Morioka have been charged in criminal court.
The settlement by the state and Gar Gaar requires it to begin the dissolution process within 60 days of a court’s approval. The nonprofit then must transfer its assets to other charitable organizations with a similar mission.
Gar Gaar, which means “help” in Somali, launched in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic to help students in need, especially those in the Somali community. The group served meals outside of the school year as part of the Summer Food Service Program, which is funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture but managed by the Minnesota Department of Education.
Gar Gaar received $21 million in reimbursements for serving 7 million meals — the top provider of summer meals in Minnesota in 2021.
Star Tribune
O.J. Simpson’s ex-bodyguard did not have murder confession, police find
What would have been a wild story was quickly put to rest Tuesday when Bloomington police issued a statement clarifying that no, it was not in possession of a recorded O.J. Simpson murder confession.
TMZ reported Tuesday afternoon that Bloomington police may have unwittingly come into possession of such a recording after arresting a former bodyguard of Simpson’s more than two years ago.
But about two hours after that report published, the suburban police department sent out a release that said the belongings seized during the arrest of Iroc Avelli had been inspected and officers “did not locate any information of evidentiary value for the Los Angeles Police Department.”
Here’s what police said happened:
Bloomington police arrested Avelli under suspicion of assault on March 3, 2022. Several items were taken by police in the process, including a backpack which contained multiple thumb drives, according to a statement.
They said Avelli and his attorney said one of the thumb drives in the backpack contained a recording of Simpson confessing to the infamous 1994 murder of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and Ron Goldman, according to Bloomington police.
A search warrant was granted to inspect the thumb drives. A copy was obtained by TMZ, dated June 26, and the document only said the results from the search were “pending.”
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