Star Tribune
St. Paul police end hourslong standoff outside home without arrest
A standoff that included a SWAT team and closed down a residential street east of downtown St. Paul for several hours ended without an arrest Monday night after officers determined the shooting suspect was not inside the home.
St. Paul police responded just before 4 p.m. to reports of a man shooting at someone he knew in a vehicle on Winthrop Street S., department spokeswoman Molly McMillen said in an email.
Officers found spent bullet casings and a vehicle with bullet holes, according to a police incident report. A woman at the scene said her ex-boyfriend assaulted her with a glass object before shooting at her vehicle, the report says.
The suspect is a 24-year-old man who has convictions for fourth-degree assault of a prison guard, assault of a police officer, robbery and car theft, court records show. The Star Tribune generally does not identify suspects before they are charged.
Several agencies responded, and witnesses believed the suspect had fled into a nearby home, McMillen said. St. Paul’s SWAT team positioned itself outside the house on the 2100 block of Glenridge Avenue in the city’s Highwood Hills neighborhood. The house is about half a mile from the initial shooting. The response included drones, at least one K-9 and an armored truck parked in the house’s driveway.
“A perimeter was established at that location, the scene was secured, and nobody was harmed,” McMillen said.
One officer repeatedly used an amplified speaker device, telling the suspect that he was under arrest and to come out with his hands up. The command was later modified to say they had a search warrant.
At least six SWAT officers moved into the house, and one began loudly warning that he was going to send in a K-9 and that “he will bite you.”
Glenridge Avenue, which has houses lining both sides of the street, was taped off during the police standoff. More than 30 residents were standing along sidewalks and nearby yards, some seated in lawn chairs as they watched the standoff unfold. Others were told to stay inside their homes and watched from the window.
Hushan Gaye, an 11-year-old who lives down the street, said he heard about eight gunshots earlier in the afternoon.
“Right as I was going back inside I heard three more shots,” he said. “I was scared, so I was going back inside the house and I told my dad.”
Josh Thomas, 18, said he gets tired of the frequent incidents and police presence in his area, noting that it’s starting to feel normal.
“Especially in this area, stuff likes this happens all the time,” he said while watching the standoff from the sidewalk.
Several residents said they hadn’t seen anyone enter the house.
Officers determined the suspect was not inside at about 7 p.m.
As the armored vehicles began leaving, officers could be seen searching the house with flashlights and collecting evidence.
The suspect was not arrested as of Tuesday evening, but police do not believe there is any ongoing danger to the public, McMillen said. The investigation continues.
Star Tribune
Two arrested in Brooklyn Park shooting that left one dead
Brooklyn Park police arrested two people Saturday in connection with an early-morning shooting that left one man dead.
Police responded to a shooting in the 7900 block of Lee Avenue North at about 4:36 a.m. Saturday, and found a man with a gunshot wound, according to a Brooklyn Park Police Department press release. The man was pronounced dead at the scene and hasn’t yet been identified.
Later Saturday, Brooklyn Park detectives arrested two suspects who are being held at the Hennepin County Jail, according to police.
Star Tribune
Gov. Tim Walz hunts in Minnesota’s pheasant opener
“We passed three of them and we did it [in a] bipartisan [way],” said Walz, who represented southern Minnesota in Congress for a dozen years before running for governor.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz holds Matt Kucharski’s dog, Libby, a 6-year-old German Shorthaired Pointer, to give her a drink during the annual Minnesota Governor’s Pheasant Hunting Opener. (Anthony Souffle)
Following the event, Walz’s motorcade wound its way north and east across farm country, past combines in fields harvesting corn, to downtown Sleepy Eye, where he slipped into a crowded brewery. In many ways, the trip resembled any year for a pheasant opener, save this time the motorcade, a dozen vehicles long, stretched out the back side of a downtown Sleepy Eye alleyway.
One patron, who declined to give her name but said she grew up in Madelia and lived in New Ulm, was purchasing a six-pack of beers when she told the bartender, “Is that Walz? I don’t got time for that guy.”
Later, when Walz briefly emerged from a side room, a chorus of cheers reached him from the balcony, before he hustled out to the motorcade.
Star Tribune
For Haitian Minnesotans, false claims targeting community are a familiar playbook
More than 4,000 Haitians live in Minnesota, many under temporary protected status. Many say rhetoric targeting immigrants in Ohio and Pennsylvania adds to their stress and uncertainty.
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