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Alina Hernandez, mother of Stillwater boy killed on Apple River, testifies on day two of Miu trial

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The last time she saw her son Isaac Schuman alive, Alina Hernandez put sunscreen on his ears and told him to go have fun with his friends on the Apple River, the Stillwater woman tearfully recalled Tuesday morning in court.

Hernandez’s testimony came on the second day of the murder trial of Nicolae Miu, the 54-year-old Prior Lake man charged with fatally stabbing Schuman and injuring four others when he pulled a knife during an argument between tubers on the Apple River July 30, 2022.

Hernandez said she was enjoying coffee on her deck with her sister-in-law when Isaac asked if he could go tubing. She said yes, but then told him she was planning to ask him to go to the airport to pick up her husband Donny Hernandez.

“He said ‘I can pick dad up,'” Hernandez told the court, “And I said, ‘No, just go have fun with your friends on the river.”

It was just a few hours later that Hernandez got a call from one of Isaac’s friends telling her about the stabbing. She and Donny quickly drove to the spot on the Apple River where emergency crews were still helping the stabbing victims. Hernandez said she saw an ambulance when they arrived and she ran to it thinking that it was treating her son, only to learn that it was another stabbing victim. Then she saw a group of people performing CPR on a person laying on the riverbank, and she recognized her son’s hair.

She ran to the river but saw that he was already gone.

“When you got to Isaac, was it clear he was already deceased?” asked St. Croix County District Attorney Karl E. Anderson.

“Yes,” said Hernandez.

The trial before St. Croix County Circuit Court judge R. Michael Waterman is expected to last two weeks. Miu faces a charge of first-degree intentional homicide in Schuman’s death, and four counts of attempted first-degree intentional homicide in the stabbings of Rhyley Mattison, A.J. Martin, Dante Carlson, and Tony Carlson.

Miu, who plead not guilty and has argued that he was acting in self-defense, could be sent to prison for life if convicted.



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Falcon Heights, St. Anthony renew police contract that ended following Philando Castile’s killing by police

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Years after their contentious split, St. Anthony police officers will once again patrol the city of Falcon Heights.

St. Anthony had policed the neighboring suburb for more than 20 years until the two cities severed their agreement after Castile was killed during a 2016 traffic stop in Falcon Heights.

Ever since, Falcon Heights has been paying the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office to police the small city that surrounds the State Fairgrounds. But Sheriff Bob Fletcher has urged the city for years to find a more permanent arraignment. Sheriff’s deputies do not patrol any of the neighboring towns and suburbs around Falcon Heights, which makes the city difficult to staff with deputies often having to travel long distances to respond to emergencies, the Sheriff’s Office has said.

The city and the Sheriff’s Office first mutually agreed to part ways in 2021, but Falcon Heights couldn’t find another agency take over until now. The city of about 5,000 has long said that it would be impractical to try to create its own police force.

Falcon Heights Mayor Randy Gustafson said he is excited the city will once again have “a community-oriented policing model.”

“That’s something I’ve wanted to see returned and our community wanted to see returned,” he said. “And this gives us that chance.”

The contract will cost Falcon Heights roughly $1.8 million a year. St. Anthony officials estimate the department will need to add nine more officers and will ask for Falcon Heights’ financial help in upgrading its police facilities.



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St. Anthony City Council approves zoning for mosque, community center

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“We want to continue to be a welcoming, inclusive community,” Mayor Wendy Webstersaid. “And at the same time, we know we have a tremendous need for affordable housing.”

Webster and some on the council also said they were worried about project leaders not having immediate plans to build an outdoor playground, arguing that was a necessary amenity for children. And council members said the agreement must include plans to address the environmental condition on the site, which city leaders say has contamination issues.

“The thing I am most careful and concerned about is you are also buying a polluted piece of land. I want to make sure you are safe in your facilities,” Council Member Lona Doolan said, adding that “if it was any other property in our community, I wouldn’t have any hesitation or reservation.”

The council approved the rezoning request with several requirements, including that a playground be constructed within two years, and that the city receive plans for parking, staffing, and added landscaping, as well as environmental reports with proposals on addressing the pollution concerns.



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US confirms North Korea has sent 3,000 troops to Russia for training and possible Ukraine combat

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WASHINGTON — The U.S. said Wednesday that 3,000 North Korean troops have deployed to Russia and are training at several locations, calling the move very serious and warning that those forces will be ”fair game” if they go into combat in Ukraine.

The deployment raises the potential for the North Koreans to join Russian forces in Ukraine and suggests expanded military ties between the two nations as Moscow seeks weapons and troops to gain ground in a grinding war that has stalemated after more than two years.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin called it a ”next step” after the North has provided Russia with arms, and said Pyongyang could face consequences for aiding Russia directly. His comments were the first public U.S. confirmation of North Korea sending troops to Russia — a development South Korean officials disclosed but was denied by Pyongyang and Moscow.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby said the U.S. believes that at least 3,000 North Korean soldiers traveled by ship to Vladivostok, Russia’s largest Pacific port, in early to mid-October.

”These soldiers then traveled onward to multiple Russian military training sites in eastern Russia, where they are currently undergoing training,” Kirby said. ”We do not yet know whether these soldiers will enter into combat alongside the Russian military, but this is certainly a highly concerning probability.”

Kirby said they could go to western Russian and then engage in combat against Ukraine’s forces, but both he and Austin said the U.S. continues to assess the situation.

Exactly what the North Korean troops are doing in Russia was ”left to be seen,” Austin told reporters in Rome.

He added: ”If they’re co-belligerents, their intention is to participate in this war on Russia’s behalf, that is a very, very serious issue, and it will have impacts not only in Europe, it will also impact things in the Indo-Pacific.”



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