Connect with us

Kare11

Alleged drug dealer charged in St. Paul triple homicide

Avatar

Published

on



Prosecutors say 41-year-old Antonio Dupree Wright of Minneapolis drove up to the home on Case Avenue on his scooter, walked in wearing a ski mask and opened fire.

ST PAUL, Minn. — Editor’s note: Antonio Wright has since been acquitted of the charges stemming from the Sept. 4, 2022 shooting deaths of three people in St. Paul. 

However, in December 2023, Wright was convicted of kidnapping and shooting a man in a separate incident that occurred just two days before, on Sept. 2.

A Minneapolis man is charged with murder in a shooting inside a St. Paul home that left three people dead and three others injured. 

The criminal complaint filed against 41-year-old Antonio Dupree Wright lays out witness accounts of the shooting, and the potential motive for why it was carried out. 

St. Paul police squads were dispatched to the home on the 900 block of Case Avenue East around 4:30 p.m. Sept. 4 on reports of a shooting. When officers arrived they found two people, referred to in the criminal complaint as SA and JC, who told them there were multiple people dead inside the residence. 

Inside the door they found 42-year-old Cory Freeman face down with gunshot wounds to his head and torso. Maisha Spaulding, 44, was seated on a couch with a gunshot to the head, while 33-year-old Angelica Gonzales was in a corner of the living room, also shot in the head. All three were declared dead on the scene. 

RELATED: Police work to unravel ‘complex’ shooting scene after 3 killed in St. Paul

Investigators on the scene talked to SA, who told them the man who had shot them was named Antonio, alleging him to be a heroin dealer with ties to the Vice Lords, who he considered a “close friend.” SA said Antonio, who is also known by his nickname, Figg, had been paranoid in recent days thinking the feds were tracking him and people were snitching.

Authorities soon identified the alleged shooter as Antonio Wright.  

SA said Antonio drove up to the house on a scooter, then walked inside the back door wearing a hoodie and ski mask. The witness said he greeted his friend, saying “What’s up, D?” SA says Antonio answered “I’m not D,” then raised a tan Glock 9mm handgun and shot Spaulding with no warning as she faced away from him. The defendant then allegedly shot Gonzales and Freeman as he attempted to flee. SA says Antonio then shot him three times before walking into a bedroom and shooting a person named JC. SA told police he rolled under a couch and played dead, and watched as Antonio Wright walked out and rode away on the scooter. 

The witness referred to as SA told investigators he believes Wright thought they were snitching on him. He admitted he owed the defendant $500 for heroin, but did not think he would do “all this” for that amount of money. 

Wright is also charged in Ramsey County District Court with kidnapping and attempted murder from a separate incident on Sept. 2, 2022. Wright put a gun to the head of someone who he thought had snitched on him after the man overheard Wright discussing a murder. Wright shot the victim four times after that man fled a vehicle he had been forced into.

Ramsey County prosecutors say a search of Wright’s criminal record shows eight prior felony convictions ranging from assault and armed robbery to drug possession and fleeing police.

Antonio Wright is being held in Chicago, awaiting extradition back to the Twin Cities. 

MORE NEWS: One dead and three wounded in shoot-out at Minneapolis bar

MORE NEWS: Jerry Westrom sentenced to life in 1993 cold case murder

MORE NEWS: The story behind Randy Moss’ ‘Straight Cash, Homie’ sound bite

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities in our YouTube playlist:



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Weekend early voting is a hit in Minnesota

Avatar

Published

on



Cities across Minnesota expanded voting hours and locations for the upcoming presidential election.

MINNEAPOLIS — Expanded early voting hours and locations are giving Minnesotans more opportunities to cast their ballots before the general election.

Over 1,000 people visited Minneapolis Elections & Voter Services over the weekend to make their voice heard.

“We have always voted as a family. We have this right as Americans to vote, and we wanted him to know right from the get-go that you’ve got to vote in every single election because this is our voice, this is our opportunity to really pick the future that we want based on the candidate that we vote for,” said Kelly Wallander.

Kelly and her husband, Claude, picked up their son Harrison from college, so they could all vote in the general election for the first time as a family.

“It’s interesting. It’s cool to see elections on TV, basically as long as I can remember, and now know that I’m a part of it and being able to vote with my parents is cool,” Harrison said.

“I like voting early just because exactly you miss the line and you get it in there,” Claude said.

Director of Elections and Voter Services for the City of Minneapolis Katie Smith said the past two days have been busy.

“We’ve had really solid turnout. We’ve had about 42,000 people who have already voted in this election,” she said.

She anticipates next weekend will be even busier.

“Every year we kind of looking at how many people we’re planning for and how many people are coming through. We try to always expand our service hours as we get closer and closer to the election,” she said.

Smith said they’ve also started using pop-up voting locations to reach more people.

“In 2023, there was a legislative change that allows for us to have sites around the city that are open for different lengths of time as well as different dates form our main site. We’ve really taken the opportunity to host some one-day early vote pop-ups… in some unique and really great spaces throughout the city,” Smith said.

Sunday’s pop-up was at the Capri Theater. Paige Gayle voted here along with her sister.

“I like early voting because it’s convenient, it’s fast and it’s quick,” she said. “I work on actual election day, so for me it was important to get out beforehand.”

Smith said offering more voting opportunities for people in Minneapolis is crucial to their work.

“It’s so important to be able to offer all of these voting methods so that people can find something that works really well for them and make their voting plan,” Smith said.

Voters tell KARE 11 one of the perks to early voting is little to no wait. Voting early also gives them peace of mind and is one less thing to do on election day.

“It’s so much more convenient. This way I don’t have to worry about it. I’ll still be working on election day, so I would have had to go in before or after work. Now, I don’t have to worry about it. I know my vote will be counted,” Macy Bauers said.

Bauers said she votes in every election and hopes more people take advantage of early voting in the coming days.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

MPD: 2 dead 1 injured in Minneapolis camp shooting

Avatar

Published

on



The two adults who were killed were both male, according to the department, which is investigating the shooting.

MINNEAPOLIS — Three people were shot, two of them fatally in a Minneapolis encampment on Sunday afternoon, according to the Minneapolis Police Department. 

The shooting occurred on the 4400 block of Snelling Avenue shortly after 3 p.m., said the MPD.

The two adults who were killed were both male, according to the department, which is investigating the shooting. 

A woman was also taken to the hospital after the shooting and is in critical condition, said the MPD. 

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Officials: Man shoots neighbor on Grand Ave. S. in Minneapolis

Avatar

Published

on



John Sawchak faces four felony charges after officials said he shot his neighbor on Grand Avenue South while trimming a tree on their shared property line.

MINNEAPOLIS — A man is recovering in the hospital after being shot outside his home in a dispute with a neighbor on Grand Avenue South in Minneapolis on Oct. 23. 

According to a criminal complaint, Minneapolis police responded to a hospital for a report of a gunshot victim on Wednesday night. The injured man had been transported from his home on Grand Avenue South for an unknown medical condition that caused him to collapse. The man was found in the fetal position by his wife when she got home from work that evening. 

Officials later identified the victim as Davis Maturi. 

At the hospital, providers found a small puncture wound in the back of Maturi’s neck that led to the discovery of a bullet lodged near his spine. When he arrived at the hospital, he couldn’t recall what led up to him being shot, according to the criminal complaint. 

Maturi’s wife told officials that he had been outside earlier in the day pruning a tree near their property line with a chainsaw. She said their neighbor, John Herbert Sawchak, 54, had “almost certainly” shot her husband. 

In the previous week, Maturi’s wife said Sawchak told her husband “Touch my tree again and I’ll kill you.” 

The criminal complaint goes on to detail numerous complaints of harassment the Maturi’s experienced since purchasing their house in September 2023. 

Oct. 11, 2023: Maturi approached Sawchak to discuss the tree on their property line. Sawchak became irate, according to the criminal complaint, yelling at Maturi and using “racially charged language.” Sawchak told Maturi if he “touched” the tree, Sawchak would “take care of” him. 

March 1, 2024: Sawchak approached Maturi while he was working outside his house on a ladder. While verbally harassing him, officials said Sawchak told Maturi that he would put him in the hospital. 

April 5, 2024: Sawchak threw household items at Maturi from his 2nd-floor window. 

May 28, 2024: Sawchak verbally threatened Maturi, calling him “a Black bastard,” and telling him “I’m going to kill you if you call the police again. All you people do is lie and commit crimes.” 

Aug. 7, 2024: Sawchak verbally threatened Maturi from his 2nd story window. Maturi saw Sawchak holding up a large knife in the window while threatening to kill Maturi and his wife. 

Oct. 8, 2024: Sawchak verbally threatened and screamed racial slurs at Maturi from his 2nd-floor window. Sawchak also, once again, brandished a knife from his window while threatening to kill Maturi. 

Oct. 14, 2024: Maturi saw Sawchak outside Maturi’s home with a firearm. Sawchak pointed the firearm at Maturi through the window. 

On the evening of Oct. 23, Maturi’s wife went home to pack some things and leave for the night, officials said. Sawchak verbally harassed her and shone a stone light on her as she left her home, the criminal complaint read. The next day, Maturi and his wife were able to access home security footage from their home cameras. The video shows Maturi working outside near the tree at the property line with his back to Sawchak’s home. A faint “crack” or “pop” can be heard, then Maturi collapsed to the ground. 

Maturi remains hospitalized with a fractured spine, two broken ribs, and a concussion. He talked to KARE 11 from his hospital bed and said he feels the police failed to protect his family by not arresting Sawchak during one of the various other incidents.

“If you’re saying you’re scared, what does that do to me?” Maturi said. “You have this body armor, you have professional training… when I call for assistance, when I called for having a knife pointed at me, I had to wait hours and hours and hours.”

As of Sunday morning, Sawchak is not in police custody. According to the criminal complaint, Sawchak has at least three active warrants associated with prior threats or acts of violence against Matsuri and other neighbors. Sawchak has “actively evaded” police during their prior attempts to contact or arrest him. 

A letter from ranking members of the Minneapolis City Council to Mayor Jacob Frey showed anger and blame directed at the Minneapolis police department for allegedly failing to act on Maturi’s numerous complaints against Sawchak before the shooting, and failing to arrest him immediately after the shooting.

“MPD still has not arrested the suspect despite charges from the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office for Attempted Murder, 1st Degree Assault, Stalking, and Harassment and a request from the HCAO for a warrant with $1 million bail. MPD told the HCAO they do not intend to execute the warrant ‘for reasons of officer safety,’” said the letter from the Minneapolis City Council.

RELATED: Minneapolis shooting prompts clash between city council and police

Watch Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara’s response below:



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.