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Injured Minnesota deputy shares his story as state cracks down

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Chisago County Sgt. Kyle Puelston knows firsthand how debilitating a crash involving a drunken driver can be.

Three years ago, a driver with a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.27% slammed into the back of Puelston’s squad car on an early December night while he was inside wrapping up a traffic stop on Hwy. 95 east of North Branch. The impact hurled Puelston forward. His head hit the roof and his neck snapped backward. He suffered a traumatic brain injury.

Puelston, a 15-year veteran of the sheriff’s office, survived, and months later returned to work. But not everybody recovers.

In the past five years, 50 people have died and hundreds more have been injured in crashes involving impaired drivers during the period from Thanksgiving eve through New Year’s Eve, according to the Department of Public Safety.

That is why Puelston is passionate about getting impaired drivers off the road and has joined an effort by 300 agencies in a statewide DWI enforcement campaign that began Wednesday and runs through Dec. 31.

“I am tired of drunk drivers taking lives of people and the quality of life away from people,” he recalled telling the judge at the sentencing for the woman who hit him.

Puelston said he still feels the effects of the 2020 crash and at times has trouble sleeping. He also wrestles with the sadness of having three close friends who were brothers killed in a crash involving a drunken driver. Puelston said he thinks about them and the impact on their families every time he arrests an impaired driver.

“No matter what the jail sentence may or may not be for the person I am arresting, I got them off the road,” he said. “Who knows what would have happened if they continued down the road and hit somebody else. Maybe I prevented that story from having to play out for another family.”

With the theme “What’s My Why,” law enforcement will be sharing stories about what motivates them to stop impaired drivers through messages on DPS social media channels.

The six-week campaign comes as DWI arrests are up. As of Monday, law enforcement had made 24,212 arrests, about a thousand more than at this time last year, DPS data shows. With the holiday and party season approaching, law enforcement has a simple message: “Plan for a sober ride,” said Col. Matt Langer with the Minnesota State Patrol. “We’re ready for those who don’t listen to our message.”

Langer also enlisted the help of family members and friends and asked them to intervene to keep anybody under the influence of any substance — including pot, which became legal in Minnesota this year — from driving, and if unsuccessful to call 911.

“Marijuana is every bit as dangerous,” Langer said.

In addition to campaigns to crack down on drunken driving, Minnesota conducts several enforcement campaigns throughout the year to address other dangerous driving behaviors, including distracted driving, speeding and not using seat belts.

The campaigns appear to be working, Langer said. Traffic fatalities on Minnesota roads are down 15% for the year, declining from 406 last year at this time to 353 through Tuesday, the DPS said.

But more work needs to be done, Puelston said.

“This holiday season, law enforcement is going to continue the fight to keep drunk drivers off the road and keep them from injuring or killing others,” he said. “It is a fight to keep my story from having to be someone else’s story. This fight is a fight worth having.”



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Minnesotans reflect on Biden’s apology

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Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and her daughter were among the throngs Friday as President Joe Biden delivered the apology that many Indigenous Americans thought would never come.

“I think he really said the things that people have been waiting to hear for generations, acknowledged just the horror and trauma of literally having our children stolen from our communities,” said Flanagan, a member of the White Earth Band of Ojibwe. “It’s a powerful first step towards healing.”

Hundreds of boarding schools operated in the 19th and 20th centuries, separating Indigenous children from their families and forcing them to assimilate to European ways. Many children were abused, and at least 973 died, according to a report from the U.S. Department of the Interior.

Other Minnesotans reacted similarly to Flanagan, saying they welcomed the apology but that additional action is needed to help Indigenous people move forward.

Anton Treuer, a professor of Ojibwe at Bemidji State University, wrote in a newsletter that the apology was “a welcome first step on the journey to healing.”

“There is no way to truly right historical injustices for the children buried at Carlisle, Haskell, and other schools, but these words set a new tone for the country and will help heal the anguish so many Natives have carried for so long,” Treuer wrote. “It gives me hope that we can come together to reconcile and heal our troubled nation.”

Sen. Mary Kunesh, DFL-New Brighton, the first Indigenous woman to serve in the state Senate, called Biden’s apology encouraging.

“This recognition of past wrongdoings is an important step towards healing relationships between the United States and the sovereign nations affected by these past systems,” Kunesh said in a statement. “This dark period of American history must be remembered and taught.”



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MPD on defensive after man shot in neck allegedly by neighbor on harassment tirade

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“I have done everything in my power to remedy this situation, and it continues to get more and more violent by the day,” Moturi wrote. “There have been numerous times when I’ve seen Sawchak outside and contacted law enforcement, and there was no response. I am not confident in the pursuit of Sawchak given that Sawchak attacked me, MPD officers had John detained, and despite an HRO and multiple warrants — they still let him go.”

On Friday, five City Council members sent a letter to Mayor Jacob Frey and Police Chief Brian O’Hara expressing their “utter horror at MPD’s failure to protect a Minneapolis resident from a clear, persistent and amply reported threat posed by his neighbor.”

Council Members Andrea Jenkins, Elliott Payne, Aisha Chughtai, Jason Chavez and Robin Wonsley went on to allege that police had failed to submit reports to the County Attorney’s Office despite threats being made with weapons, and at times while Sawchak screamed racial slurs. Sawchak is white and Moturi is Black.

The council members also contend in their letter that the MPD told the County Attorney’s Office that police did not intend to execute the warrant for “reasons of officer safety.”

At a Friday afternoon news conference at MPD’s Fifth Precinct, O’Hara said police had been working to arrest Sawchak since at least April, but “no Minneapolis police officers have had in-person contact with that suspect since the victim in this case has been calling us.” The chief pointed out that Sawchak is mentally ill, has guns and refuses to cooperate “in the dozens of times that police officers have responded to the residence.”

O’Hara put aside the option to carry out “a high-risk warrant based on these factors [and] the likelihood of an armed, violent confrontation where we may have to use deadly force with the suspect.” The preference, he said, was to arrest Sawchak outside his home, but “in this case, this suspect is a recluse and does not come out of the house.”



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Rochester lands $85 million federal grant for rapid bus system

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ROCHESTER – The Federal Transit Administration has green-lighted an $85 million grant supporting the development of the city’s planned Link Bus Rapid Transit system.

The FTA formally announced the grant on Friday during a ceremonial check presentation outside of the Mayo Civic Center, one of the seven stops planned for the bus line. The federal grant will cover about 60% of the project’s estimated $143.4 million price tag, with the remaining funds coming from Destination Medical Center, the largest public-private development project in state history.

Set to go live in 2026, the 2.8-mile Link system will connect downtown Rochester, including Mayo Clinic’s campuses, with a proposed “transit village” that will include parking, hundreds of housing units and a public plaza. The bus line will be the first of its kind outside the Twin Cities — with service running every five minutes during peak hours.

“That means you may not even need to look at a schedule,” said Veronica Vanterpool, deputy administrator for the FTA. “You can just show up at your transit stop and expect the next bus to come in a short time. That is a game changer and a life-transformational experience in transit for those people who are using it and relying on it.”

The planned Second Street corridor is already one of the busiest roads in Rochester, carrying more than 21,800 vehicles a day, and city planners have talked for years about ways to reduce traffic congestion in the city’s downtown. Local officials estimate that the transit line, which will rely on a fleet of all-electric buses, will handle 11,000 riders on its first day of operation and save eight city blocks of parking.

Speaking to a crowd of about 100 people gathered on Friday, Sen. Amy Klobuchar said the project shows Rochester is thinking strategically about how it handles growth.

“If you just plan the business expansion, and you don’t have the workforce, you don’t have the child care, the housing or the transit, it’s not going to work very well as a lot of communities across the nation have found,” Klobuchar said.



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