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Big Ten Makers Market at Minneapolis City Center

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The market will be open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, and again next Wednesday through Saturday during the Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament.

MINNEAPOLIS — The Big Ten Makers Market at Minneapolis City Center is a one-stop shop for handmade goods, artistic creations, and unique finds featuring 50 local creators, Big Ten Conference alumni, live music and entertainment, free fan face painting, photo opportunities and more. 

The market will be open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday for the Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament, and again next week Wednesday through Saturday when downtown hosts the Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament.

Right next to Makers Market at City Center is the Minnesota Champions Fan Zone. Fans can come shoot hoops and meet some of Minnesota’s greatest Olympians.

This is the first time in the history of the Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament that the event has sold out. But at the Fan Zone, fans have a chance to win tickets each day. 

Last year Minneapolis set a Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament record when nearly 48,000 fans attended the tournament at Target Center. This year, officials are expecting attendance to more than double to 109,000. 

Downtown will remain the epicenter of Big Ten hoops next week as well, as the men’s tournament rolls into town for the first time ever. Tickets are still available for the men’s tourney.

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BCA agent testifies on concealment of Maddi Kingsbury’s body

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BCA Special Agent Joe Swenson told jurors that Maddi Kingsbury’s remains were hidden by brush and logs 6 to 10 feet long and appeared to be there “on purpose.”

MANKATO, Minn. — BCA Special Agent Joe Swenson was the first witness called Monday morning, the 8th day of testimony in the 1st-degree murder trial of Adam Fravel for the death of Maddi Kingsbury, his ex-girlfriend and mother of his two children.

Swenson, based in Rochester, took the stand and testified about arriving at the scene where Maddi’s remains were found inside a culvert on June 7, 2023.  He recalled that the remains were so hidden that he couldn’t tell where the Fillmore Co. Deputy was pointing until they started moving logs and brush.

The BCA agent described some of the logs in the ditch as being 6-10 feet long and “the size of older wooden powerlines, 6-inches across.”

“It certainly appeared the logs were placed there on purpose,” Swenson said.

Then prosecutor Phil Prokopowicz questioned Agent Swenson about discoveries made during an April 27, 2023, search of the Rochester home Fravel and Kingsbury shared. Jurors were shown photos inside the garage as Agent Swenson testified about finding a roll a roll of black Gorilla duct tape, which seemed to match the tape wrapped around Maddi’s body.

Swenson told the courtroom he also found Wyze-brand surveillance cameras in the garage, which had been taken down from inside the townhome and were not operational on the day investigators believe Maddi was killed.



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Woman charged with ‘rustling’ sheep in Bloomington

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Last week, prosecutors charged Mary Kay Bower, 42, of St. Paul, with rustling and livestock theft, which is a felony.

SHAKOPEE, Minn. — In a YouTube video titled “Rustling is still a thing,” Bloomington Police Chief Booker T. Hodges begins by saying “I’m going to talk to you about a crime that city dwellers don’t often have to talk about.”

Hodges is referring to a woman who was recently arrested and charged with stealing a sheep from a farm in Bloomington.

Last week, prosecutors charged Mary Kay Bower, 42, of St. Paul, with rustling and livestock theft, which is a felony.

On Saturday, Oct. 19, around 6:45 p.m., officers were called to Old Shakopee Road East on a report of a man and woman walking a dog and a sheep.

Bower originally told the officers she had purchased the sheep, according to court documents. However, the man with Bower told officers she “had stepped over the fence to a farm, put a leash on the sheep, and then pulled the sheep through the fence. The male said {Bower} pulled so hard that the sheep was choking.”

Officers said they confirmed with the nearby farm’s owner that the sheep was stolen. The farm’s owner said the “sheep is a breeding hair ram worth approximately $500.”

Chief Booker ended his video by saying the ram was in good condition and Bower’s dog and a “bunny rabbit” that she also had in her possession had been returned to her after she was released from the Hennepin County Jail.



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

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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 — Charges have been filed against a south Minneapolis man accused of shooting his neighbor after a long-simmering rift.

The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office filed charges of attempted murder, first-degree assault, stalking and harassment against 54-year-old John Herbert Sawchak after alleged racial comments escalated to threats, then culminated in that neighbor being shot while pruning a tree on the line between their two properties. 

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 Moturi. 

At the hospital, providers found a small puncture wound in the back of Moturi’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. 

Moturi’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 Sawchak, had “almost certainly” shot her husband. 

In the previous week, Moturi’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 Moturi’s experienced since purchasing their house in September 2023. 

  • Oct. 11, 2023: Moturi approached Sawchak to discuss the tree on their property line. Sawchak became irate, according to the criminal complaint, yelling at Moturi and using “racially charged language.” Sawchak told Moturi if he “touched” the tree, Sawchak would “take care of” him. 
  • March 1, 2024: Sawchak approached Moturi while he was working outside his house on a ladder. While verbally harassing him, officials said Sawchak told Moturi that he would put him in the hospital. 
  • April 5, 2024: Sawchak threw household items at Moturi from his 2nd-floor window. 
  • May 28, 2024: Sawchak verbally threatened Moturi, 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 Moturi from his 2nd story window. Moturi saw Sawchak holding up a large knife in the window while threatening to kill Moturi and his wife. 
  • Oct. 8, 2024: Sawchak verbally threatened and screamed racial slurs at Moturi from his 2nd-floor window. Sawchak also, once again, brandished a knife from his window while threatening to kill Moturi. 
  • Oct. 14, 2024: Moturi saw Sawchak outside Moturi’s home with a firearm. Sawchak pointed the firearm at Moturi through the window.

On the evening of Oct. 23, Moturi’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, Moturi and his wife were able to access home security footage from their home cameras. The video shows Moturi 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 Moturi collapsed to the ground. 

Moturi remains hospitalized with a fractured spine, two broken ribs, and a concussion. He spoke with 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?” Moturi 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 Moturi 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 reflected anger and blame directed at the Minneapolis police department for allegedly failing to act on Moturi’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:



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